From the outside, Lypiatt Park, home to kinetic sculptor Daniel Chadwick and his white-clad family, oozes baronial English charm—all turrets, spires and gothic windows. Inside, the Victorian mansion, perched on a slope in the picturesque Cotswold Hills some 112 miles West of London, is a menagerie of mobiles, cast metal sculptures and large-scale roundel canvases by his friend and fellow artist Damien Hirst. It was Daniel’s father, the modernist sculptor Lynn Chadwick, who bravely blanched the interior of the gothic pile, which Daniel shares with his wife Juliet and their children Eva and Caspar. “I get regular moments of unbelievable pleasure in this house,” muses Chadwick, “for example when the sun shines through the stained glass windows on to the wooden floor and on to the walls.” A one-time collaborator with Zaha Hadid, working with her on the Vitra Campus Fire Station among other buildings, Chadwick has since focused his creative energy on various design projects including creating a portable pizza oven favored by gastronomes including Margot Henderson, and plans to turn the grounds of Lypiatt Park into a sculpture park dedicated to his father’s work, the largest such project in Great Britain.