Visit

An Invitation To Begin

Most people arrive believing they’re visiting a house.

They quickly discover it’s something else.

The experience is difficult to describe because there’s no obvious comparison.

Room after room reveals another question.

Another story.

Another surprise.

Visitors often find themselves wondering where to look first.

Then realizing there’s no right answer.

The first response is almost always the same.

"Wow."

What follows is different for everyone.

Some laugh.

Some become quiet.

Some leave with more questions than they arrived with.

Very few leave unchanged.

What A Visit Offers

Photographs capture moments.

Books capture stories.

Documentaries capture fragments.

A visit offers something different.

The opportunity to spend time with the work itself.

To experience the house, collections, and discoveries in a way no photograph or publication can fully replicate.

The work now exists in a different form than it did during Dell's lifetime.

Collections have been documented.

Objects have been photographed.

Stories have been recorded.

Yet the scale of what was created remains difficult to communicate from a distance.

No two visits are exactly alike.

Some guests arrive as collectors.

Others as researchers, educators, museum professionals, documentary filmmakers, or simply people who feel a strong connection to the project.

Most visits begin with curiosity.

The best visits become conversations.

Stories lead to questions.

Questions lead to discoveries.

And discoveries often lead somewhere unexpected.

Most visits last between one and two hours, though some continue much longer.

The goal is not to reveal everything.

The goal is to provide a beginning.

Request Access

The Great Kinyon remains largely unseen.

The work is still being documented.

New discoveries continue to emerge.

Stories continue to surface.

Visitors are not arriving at the end of a completed project.

They are stepping into the middle of an unfolding one.

For many, that becomes part of the experience itself.

The opportunity to encounter something before its next chapter has been written.

If you feel a genuine connection to the project and its future, we invite you to reach out.

Collectors.

Researchers.

Museum professionals.

Educators.

Documentary and media professionals.

Subject matter experts.

And those who believe they may contribute meaningfully to what comes next are encouraged to introduce themselves.

Every request is reviewed personally.

Continue Exploring

Explore five significant chapters currently being considered for future stewardship.

Follow discoveries, preservation efforts, documentary updates, and stories from the house.