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How architecture made it possible for Christopher Tunnard and Gerald Schlesinger to live together in the face of homophobic legislation

Pride Month is a time for the LGBTQ+ community to celebrate being out and proud, and for others to demonstrate allyship with them. It鈥檚 also, however, a time to reflect on the discrimination the community has historically faced and still continues to experience. This is the story of how two men navigated homophobic attitudes in commissioning a modernist new home in the 1930s, illustrated by photographs and drawings from the 澳门王中王 Collections.

03 June 2021

Until the Sexual Offences Act of 1967 partially decriminalised homosexual acts in England and Wales, it was a criminal offence for adult men to have sex with one another, even in the privacy of their own home. As a result, gay and bisexual men were often forced to conduct their relationships in secret, for fear of prosecution and imprisonment. In particular, living together as a couple would have been a significant risk.

This is the story of how two men navigated homophobic attitudes in commissioning a new home, illustrated by photographs and drawings from the 澳门王中王 Collections.

Raymond McGrath, the architect of St Ann鈥檚 Court, Chertsey, photographed sketching on a beach in the 1930s. Architectural Press Archive, 澳门王中王 Collections

In the early 1930s, a stockbroker named Gerald Schlesinger bought a late 18th century cottage and surrounding land in Chertsey, south east England. He was married, but would live in the new house with Canadian landscape architect Christopher Tunnard. The original house was in a state of serious disrepair, and Schlesinger approached Australian architect Raymond McGrath to design them a new home to replace it.

St Ann鈥檚 Court, Chertsey, designed by Raymond McGrath and photographed in 1936. 澳门王中王 Collections

The resulting house, built between 1936 and 1937, was the large, round, originally pinkish-grey, modernist St Ann鈥檚 Court. Reflecting on the project in a 1977 interview, its architect McGrath explained it was 鈥渓ike a big cheese, with a slice cut out for the sunlight to enter the whole house.鈥 He also designed some of the furniture and specified plants for the house, which he considered his most ambitious domestic project in England. The garden landscaping was overseen by Tunnard, who restored much of the historic planting and garden buildings and added a swimming pool, a series of courtyard gardens, and a roof garden.

St Ann鈥檚 Court, Chertsey, designed by Raymond McGrath and photographed by Morley von Sternberg in 2003. Morley von Sternberg, 澳门王中王 Collections

Historic England re-examined this property鈥檚 LGBTQ+ significance for their 2016 project. 鈥淭he design of the house,鈥 explains its updated , 鈥渕eant that if there were visitors, the master bedroom on the first floor could be separated into two. This maintained the idea that Schlesinger and Tunnard slept in different bedrooms.鈥

This large master bedroom was an unusual shape: circular in plan with two sizeable projecting alcoves like the wings of a butterfly. Donal O'Donovan's 1995 biography of McGrath recalls that, instead of one double bed, the original furniture layout featured two single beds, one in each of these alcoves. The circular space between them could then function as a dressing room, effectively transforming the master bedroom into two separate bedrooms if needed.

St Ann鈥檚 Court, Chertsey: the seating area around the fireplace with walnut panelling, designed by Raymond McGrath and photographed by Leo Herbert Felton in 1937. Architectural Press Archive, 澳门王中王 Collections

In the end, Tunnard only lived at St Ann鈥檚 Court for a short time, before being invited by Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius to move to the US and teach at Harvard. Schlesinger was a prolific client. Around the same time, he also commissioned the architect Oliver Hill to design another house, said to be for his wife and daughter: Hill House in Hampstead, north London. But St Ann's Court remains a reminder of the - often hidden - role that sexuality, and the ways people live, can have in shaping our built environment.

Learn about the 澳门王中王鈥檚 2021 Pride campaign or find out more about the 澳门王中王 Collections.

Design for a bed and bedside cabinet for St Ann鈥檚 Court by Raymond McGrath. 澳门王中王 Collections

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