Reading the family houses of an architect.

Thesis


Marsden, Graeme 1998. Reading the family houses of an architect. Thesis University of East London
AuthorsMarsden, Graeme
Abstract

This thesis considers relationships between occupants and their places of
occupation. Of relationships between the bodies of occupation and the stones
occupied in the speck instance where the places of occupation have been
designed by one of the occupants. The late eighteenth/early nineteenth century
architect Sir John Soane has been selected as the architect/occupant. This
selection was made because of his gift to the nation of a house in Lincoln 's Inn
Field designed for his family, offered complete with an extensive collection of
representations of occupation. This archive material, contained in letters,
journals, account books, home made books, descriptions of the places of
occupation, watercolours and architectural drawings, has been used extensively
in the fabric of the thesis. It is this material, contained within the house, that is
under consideration: the project uses the matter collected/contained both as a
means of considering the logic of the house/home and as matter to be analysed, or
subjected to that logic. As the material under examination includes textual matter,
interrelationships between this form of material, the bodies of writing and the
stones of the places of writing are analysed.
The houses/villas under examination are Pitzhanger Manor House, a villa at
Ealing; No. 12 & 13 Lincoln's Inn Fields, two adjoining London town houses and
the Clerk of the Works' official residence at Chelsea. They are considered
exclusively in terms of representation, not as built or physical form. Views of the
houses/villas from contexts beyond the framework of the archive are not engaged
with; they are not located within a street, city, or world perspective.
The material contained within the archive is used to consider the construction and
destruction of the houses/villas designed by the architect/owner. It is also used to
examine what might be deemed the construction and destruction of the family of
3
occupation and the formation of another form of family of occupation. In so
doing, the thesis does not attempt to build a portrait of the occupiers, or a history
of'the place off occupation. It is neither a biography nor an architectural history
but something in between; akin to an analysis of the place of occupation from the
logic of the material collected and contained.

Keywordsarchitecture; occupants
Year1998
Web address (URL)http://hdl.handle.net/10552/1244
File
File Access Level
Registered users only
Publication dates
Print1998
Publication process dates
Deposited09 May 2011
Additional information

This thesis supplied via ROAR to UEL-registered users is protected by copyright and other intellectual property rights, and duplication of any part of the material is not permitted, except for your personal use for the purposes of non-commercial research and private study in electronic or print form. You must obtain permission from the copyright-holder for any other use. Electronic or print copies may not be offered, for sale or otherwise, to anyone. No quotation from the thesis may be published without proper acknowledgement.

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