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E-raamat: Part-Architecture: The Maison de Verre, Duchamp, Domesticity and Desire in 1930s Paris

  • Formaat: 256 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781317084044
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  • Formaat: 256 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 20-Jul-2017
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781317084044
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Part-Architecture presents a detailed and original study of Pierre Chareau’s Maison de Verre through another seminal modernist artwork, Marcel Duchamp’s Large Glass. Aligning the two works materially, historically and conceptually, the book challenges the accepted architectural descriptions of the Maison de Verre, makes original spatial and social accounts of its inhabitation in 1930s Paris, and presents new architectural readings of the Large Glass. Through a rich analysis, which incorporates creative projects into history and theory research, the book establishes new ways of writing about architecture.

Designed for politically progressive gynaecologist Dr Jean Dalsace and his avant-garde wife, Annie Dalsace, the Maison de Verre combines a family home with a gynaecology clinic into a ‘free-plan’ layout. Screened only by glass walls, the presence of the clinic in the home suggests an untold dialogue on 1930s sexuality. The text explores the Maison de Verre through another radical glass construction, the Large Glass, where Duchamp’s complex depiction of unconsummated sexual relations across the glass planes reveals his resistance to the marital conventions of 1920s Paris. This and other analyses of the Large Glass are used as a framework to examine the Maison de Verre as a register of the changing history of women’s domestic and maternal choices, reclaiming the building as a piece of female social architectural history.

The process used to uncover and write the accounts in the book is termed ‘part-architecture’. Derived from psychoanalytic theory, part-architecture fuses analytical, descriptive and creative processes, to produce a unique social and architectural critique. Identifying three essential materials to the Large Glass, the book has three main chapters: ‘Glass’, ‘Dust’ and ‘Air’. Combining theory text, creative writing and drawing, each traces the history and meaning of the material and its contribution to the spaces and sexuality of the Large Glass and the Maison de Verre. As a whole, the book contributes important and unique spatial readings to existing scholarship and expands definitions of architectural design and history.

Arvustused

Emma Cheatles inspiring book is a must-read for any historian of twentieth-century modernism. Drawing on a vast range of materials, Cheatle argues that Marcel Duchamps Large Glass (1923) and Pierre Chareau's Maison de Verre (1932) are two key representations of early twentieth century sexual culture that can productively be read against each other. The insistence that Maison de Verre be understood within the context of contemporary struggles over sexual and reproductive rights for women is a ground-breaking one. More broadly, Cheatle's concept of 'part-architecture' itself sets out a mode of working that can go beyond the limits of the textual record, using the buildings materiality and creative sited practices to offer new interpretations and speculative insights for architectural history and design thinking.

Barbara Penner, Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL

List of illustrations
viii
Acknowledgements xii
Prologue xiii
1 Introduction
1(1)
The Maison de Verre through the Large Glass
1(3)
Part-architecture
4(1)
Design
5(3)
Book structure
8(5)
PART I
13(44)
2 Histories: the Maison de Verre through the Large Glass
15(1)
The Maison de Verre
15(1)
Form
16(1)
Pierre Chareau
17(3)
Modernist representation
20(2)
References to the Large Glass
22(3)
Provocation
25(1)
The Large Glass
25(7)
Form
25(2)
Notes
27(1)
History: lens, body objects, transmission
28(3)
The Maison de Verre
31(1)
Women in Paris
32(13)
Procreative imperatives
33(2)
Jean Dalsace and the Maison de Verre
35(10)
3 Theories: part-object, part-architecture
45(12)
Part-object
46(3)
L schema
46(1)
Part-object
47(1)
Spatial experience
48(1)
Part-architecture
49(2)
Writing part-architecture
51(1)
Design methods
51(2)
Lacan's glass, dust, air
53(4)
PART II
57(148)
4 Glass
59(56)
Glass and modernity
59(9)
Glace sans tain
61(2)
Verre presse
63(5)
Transparency
68(26)
Shop window
71(6)
Vitrine
77(9)
Lens
86(3)
Mirror
89(5)
Translucency
94(14)
Convolutions, cuts and slips
95(13)
Glass part-architecture
108(7)
5 Dust
115(60)
Material collection
115(1)
Dust
115(14)
Dust breeding
116(3)
Skin
119(2)
Decay
121(1)
City dust
122(3)
House
125(1)
Cleaning and modernity
126(1)
Housekeeping
127(2)
House as archive
129(6)
Plans
130(1)
Dark room
131(2)
Architecture as archive
133(1)
Dust recovery
134(1)
Four women
135(2)
Annie Dalsace -- Dark rooms
137(2)
Housekeeper -- Dusting
139(13)
Writing dust -- Motes
152(7)
Mary Reynolds -- Dust jackets
159(8)
Dust part-architecture
167(8)
6 Air
175(26)
Atmosphere
175(1)
Air de Paris
175(1)
Draughts
176(4)
Ventilation and air circulation
180(5)
Cast air
185(1)
Infrathin and Irigaray
185(1)
Fissure
186(2)
Cast air
188(3)
Transmission
191(1)
Sounding
191(3)
Mouthing
194(5)
7 Coda
201(4)
A leave-taking
202(3)
Bibliography 205(18)
Index 223
Emma Cheatle is Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Newcastle University Humanities Research Institute and dissertation tutor at Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL.