Nathaniel
Saltonstall Born in 1903 in Milton,
Nathanial Saltonstall was the scion of an old and prominent New England
family. He graduated from Harvard in 1928 and MIT in 1931, and began
his career as an architect at the Boston firm of Little and Russell.
He went on to work for Putnam and Cox where he became a partner.
He entered the army during World War II as a lieutenant in the Army
Air Corp, Camouflage Division, and was discharged as a Major in Special
Services in charge of the Art Division. In 1945, Saltonstall and
colleague, Oliver Morton, left Putnam and Cox to form their own partnership.
The firm’s work included Saltonstall’s own home in Medfield,
a development of passive solar houses, a design for the first Institute
of Contemporary Art building (he was a founder and president from
1936 to 1948), houses on the Outer Cape and The Colony (originally
called the Mayo Hill Colony Club) which he owned and managed as an
outpost for artists and patrons. His genteel, regional approach to
Modernism was popular with his clients, many of whom were wealthy
art collectors and introduced to the Cape by staying at The Colony.
Saltonstall was a trustee of The Boston Museum of Fine Arts and,
in 1959, established the Nathanial Saltonstall Arts Fund, supporting
many cultural institutions through sales of works in his collection.
His long-time companion, Tom Galliano, ran the Wellfleet Art Gallery
on Route 6 which Saltonstall designed. The gallery was the center
of Wellfleet’s art and social scene in the 1950s. Saltonstall
died in 1968.
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Projects on the Outer Cape Comfort House Stuart Harrod House (destroyed by fire Wellfleet) Yeston / Nossiter House, Wellfleet Wellfleet Art Gallery, Wellfleet |
Interior of the Kuhn House. The house was designed for Thomas Kuhn, author of and ‘The Structures of Scientific Revolutions,’ and influential thinker concerning the Philosophy of Science.
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