1st Edition

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

By Emma Cheatle Copyright 2017
256 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

256 Pages
by Routledge

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,... Read more

Prologue, 1. Introduction, Part I, 2. Histories: the Maison de Verre through the Large Glass, 3. Theories: part-object, part-architecture, Part II, 4. Glass, 5. Dust, 6. Air, Coda

Biography

Emma Cheatle is Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Newcastle University Humanities Research Institute and dissertation tutor at Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL.

Emma Cheatle’s inspiring book is a must-read for any historian of twentieth-century modernism. Drawing on a vast range of materials, Cheatle argues that Marcel Duchamp’s 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 building’s 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