Eine Plattform für die Wissenschaft: Bauingenieurwesen, Architektur und Urbanistik
Part-architecture: the Maison de Verre through the Large Glass
My thesis is an examination of a building, the Maison de Verre (Pierre Chareau, Paris, 1928–32), through an artwork, the Large Glass (Marcel Duchamp, Paris, New York, 1915–23).1 Starting from the fact that both are predominantly constructed from glass, I further align the two works materially, historically and conceptually. Ultimately, I challenge the accepted architectural descriptions of the Maison de Verre, providing original spatial and social accounts of its use and inhabitation in the 1930s. The Maison de Verre was designed as a gynaecology clinic and family home for Annie and Dr Jean Dalsace. Utilising a 'free-plan', it spatialised a programme for progressive female sexual health within a domestic setting. In the context of legislation criminalising contraception and abortion, the building was, perhaps by necessity, not visible from the street. The Large Glass, in contrast, is an overt narrative on unconsummated desire, and, I argue, despite being constructed in New York, is Duchamp’s response to 1910–20s Parisian sexual mores. I interrogate these ideas through a method for which I have coined the term ‘part-architecture’, developed from theories of the psychoanalytic ‘L Schema’ and ‘part-object’, after Rosalind Krauss and Jacques Lacan. Partarchitecture is an original architectural production which combines written critical theory and design operations – including fiction writing, drawing, book-arts and audio – to recover the (now invisible) historical, social and sexual interactions occurring in and between the Maison de Verre and the Large Glass. Three central chapters, structured around the materials glass, dust and air – where glass signifies looking, dust the discarded past, and air the activation of invisible registers – recover the works as new accounts. Importantly, part-architecture offers descriptions that suggest the works remain partial, open ended and contingent.
Part-architecture: the Maison de Verre through the Large Glass
My thesis is an examination of a building, the Maison de Verre (Pierre Chareau, Paris, 1928–32), through an artwork, the Large Glass (Marcel Duchamp, Paris, New York, 1915–23).1 Starting from the fact that both are predominantly constructed from glass, I further align the two works materially, historically and conceptually. Ultimately, I challenge the accepted architectural descriptions of the Maison de Verre, providing original spatial and social accounts of its use and inhabitation in the 1930s. The Maison de Verre was designed as a gynaecology clinic and family home for Annie and Dr Jean Dalsace. Utilising a 'free-plan', it spatialised a programme for progressive female sexual health within a domestic setting. In the context of legislation criminalising contraception and abortion, the building was, perhaps by necessity, not visible from the street. The Large Glass, in contrast, is an overt narrative on unconsummated desire, and, I argue, despite being constructed in New York, is Duchamp’s response to 1910–20s Parisian sexual mores. I interrogate these ideas through a method for which I have coined the term ‘part-architecture’, developed from theories of the psychoanalytic ‘L Schema’ and ‘part-object’, after Rosalind Krauss and Jacques Lacan. Partarchitecture is an original architectural production which combines written critical theory and design operations – including fiction writing, drawing, book-arts and audio – to recover the (now invisible) historical, social and sexual interactions occurring in and between the Maison de Verre and the Large Glass. Three central chapters, structured around the materials glass, dust and air – where glass signifies looking, dust the discarded past, and air the activation of invisible registers – recover the works as new accounts. Importantly, part-architecture offers descriptions that suggest the works remain partial, open ended and contingent.
Part-architecture: the Maison de Verre through the Large Glass
Cheatle, EJ (Autor:in)
28.11.2013
Doctoral thesis, UCL (University College London).
Hochschulschrift
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
DDC:
720
TIBKAT | 1988
|Maison Dalsace, "Maison de Verre", Paris, France : 1928-1932
TIBKAT | 1980
|Pierre Chareau's lucent Maison de Verre
Online Contents | 2002
|Maison de verre, Leerdam, Pays-Bas
British Library Online Contents | 2002
|