I recently watched a DVD called "My Architect - A Son's Journey" and surprise!
It wasn't just about the architecture, but about a genius of a man who had a "complicated" personal life which he was rather private about, architect Louis Kahn who studied at the University of Pennsylvania and later taught at Penn and Yale.
His two mistresses, Ann Tyng and Harriet Pattison, were educated women who were also architects and worked with him on projects. With them he had a child each, and one of those children, his only son Nathaniel, made the documentary film in 2003 about his father. His search was for understand of the man who had fathered him. While many famous architects made commentary about Louis Kahn as an architect in this film I found the mistresses and the meeting of the children most interesting. It's not clear to me for how long these educated and dedicated women worked before or after having their child, who bought the houses, or what their finances were. It's implied that Kahn was financially involved with all of them. They resided in the Philadephia area.
Splitting his time between three families, Kahn was too busy with his career, which included travel to far off places, to be a father who saw much of his children. He also made some promises he couldn't keep like that he would leave his wife and come and live with one or the other.
In this case, "Love Triangle" doesn't describe the relationships.
It wasn't just about the architecture, but about a genius of a man who had a "complicated" personal life which he was rather private about, architect Louis Kahn who studied at the University of Pennsylvania and later taught at Penn and Yale.
His two mistresses, Ann Tyng and Harriet Pattison, were educated women who were also architects and worked with him on projects. With them he had a child each, and one of those children, his only son Nathaniel, made the documentary film in 2003 about his father. His search was for understand of the man who had fathered him. While many famous architects made commentary about Louis Kahn as an architect in this film I found the mistresses and the meeting of the children most interesting. It's not clear to me for how long these educated and dedicated women worked before or after having their child, who bought the houses, or what their finances were. It's implied that Kahn was financially involved with all of them. They resided in the Philadephia area.
Splitting his time between three families, Kahn was too busy with his career, which included travel to far off places, to be a father who saw much of his children. He also made some promises he couldn't keep like that he would leave his wife and come and live with one or the other.
In this case, "Love Triangle" doesn't describe the relationships.
These women had children when having a child while single was a scandal lived as single mothers all their lives.
With Ann Tyng, Louis had a daughter named Alexandra, born in 1954. To avoid scandal at the time, Ann was sent to Rome to have her daughter. With Harriet Pattison, he had Nathaniel. (I don't know the story about how Nathaniel got the surname Kahn.) Kahn's wife Esther and his daughter with her, Sue Ann, lived several miles from Nathaniel, who born in 1962, and his mother and Sue Ann's mother never crossed paths until Louis' funeral. (Louis died at age 73.)
The Rabbi who officiated at Louis' funeral didn't know he had a son.
NEITHER MISTRESS EVER MARRIED ANYONE.
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