Everyone’s a critic: Price cut on modernist Pound Ridge home once owned by museum curator

The late William Rubin, who was curator at Museum of Modern Art, lived there

(Houlihan Lawrence)
(Houlihan Lawrence)

 

A geometric-shaped home that had been owned by the late museum curator William Rubin is back on the market at a significant discount.

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The mid-1990s modernist home in Pound Ridge, New York, is now asking $4.9 million, according to the New York Post. It had hit the market in 2019 at $6.5 million, then was pulled.

Rubin, who was the Museum of Modern Art’s curator, and his wife, art historian Phyillis Hattis, previously owned the Westchester County home.

The 9,358-square-foot property was designed by Vuko Tashkovich, who worked with famed modernist architect I.M. Pei. It includes some uniquely-shaped spaces in the four bedrooms and 6.5 bathrooms. The 3.4-acre property includes a dock and 300 feet of waterfront, according to the Post. There are also gardens on the grounds. [NYP]