Women's places
These case studies examine the professional and domestic spaces created by women, as producers, clients, consumers and theorists: Princess Louise, Kate Greenaway, the Hall sisters, Josephine Baker, Elsie de Wolfe, Eileen Gray, Elizabeth Denby, Dora Gordine and Marie Dormoy. Contains: Questions of identity: women, architecture and the Aesthetic Movement / by Louise Campbell: Creating 'The new room': the Hall sisters of West Wickham and Richard Norman Shaw / by Trevor Keeble: Elsie de Wolfe and her female clients, 1905-15: gender, class and the professional interior decorator / by Penny Sparke: Your place or mine? The client's contribution to domestic architecture / by Alice T. Friedman: Architecture and reputation: Eileen Gray, gender, and modernism / by Lynne Walker: Marie Dormoy and the architectural conversation / by Tanis Hinchcliffe: A house of her own: Dora Gordine and Dorich House (1936) / by Brenda Martin: Elizabeth Denby or Maxwell Fry? A matter of contribution / by Elizabeth Darling.
- Creator
- Martin, Brenda > (ed.)
- Sparke, Penny > (ed.)