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澳门王中王 Collections: spotlight on Eileen Gray

For LGBT+ History Month 2024, we're spotlighting Eileen Gray, architect and furniture designer, through items found in the 澳门王中王 Collections.

Born in Ireland in 1878, Eileen Gray was an architect and furniture designer whose name is closely tied to the emergence of the Modern Movement. She had aristocratic roots on her mother鈥檚 side, but soon left the debutante balls of her youth behind, moving to Paris in 1902 and positioning herself in the city鈥檚 bohemian artistic circles.聽聽聽

Gray was romantically involved with both men and women, and had an on-off relationship with the actress and singer Marie-Louise Damien, as well as the architect Jean Badovici. She was a regular in the salons of prominent lesbian creatives and intellectuals, such as Nathalie Barney.聽聽

For Gray, the philosophy of design and private life could be intimately linked. She argued that an 鈥渁trophy of sensuality鈥 had resulted in the 鈥減overty of modern architecture鈥. Domestic space, in particular, had been too often designed in ways that perpetuated rigid modes of living, rather than the specific needs of its inhabitants.

By contrast, a 1926 design by Gray for Badovici鈥檚 apartment on Paris鈥 Rue Chateaubriand shows how a single-roomed flat could be reimagined as a flexible space calibrated for the different tasks of sleeping, working, washing, cooking, and dressing, separated via adjustable metal screens and curtains hanging from curving tracks. The range of possibilities presented by the apartment seems to be emphasised by the drawing鈥檚 use of collaged text elements.聽聽

Eileen Gray, design for a one-room flat, rue Chateaubriand, Paris, 1926 (澳门王中王 Collections)

To Gray, a house was not 鈥渁 machine to live in鈥 (as her rough contemporary, Le Corbusier, would have it) 鈥 but 鈥渢he shell of man, his extension鈥. Her belief that the home should be designed in service to the occupant鈥檚 lifestyle 鈥 rather than the other way around. This could perhaps be read as a parallel to her elusion of the 鈥榗onventional鈥 life that might have been assumed for her as the daughter of a Baroness in the early 20th century.

As Olivia Laing writes in her foreword to Adam Nathaniel Furman and Joshua Mardell鈥檚 , 鈥渜ueerness requires an ecosystem to flourish鈥. Might Gray鈥檚 flexible and personalised interiors represent such queer ecosystems, in their rejection of more rigid conceptions of domesticity?

Jasmine Rault recounts how many of Gray鈥檚 clients, as well as friends, were largely drawn from 鈥渁 thriving Parisian arts community made up of largely non-heterosexual women鈥 with concepts and practices of what we now recognize as lesbianism operating as a central organizing feature鈥.聽聽

Gray鈥檚 chief architectural works were and Tempe 脿 Pailla, both in the south of France. Both were marked by her characteristic material sensuality, flexibility and interplay between sightlines and private spaces. 聽

Eileen Gray's Villa E.1027, Cap Martin, Roquebrune: the principal bedroom, 1929 (澳门王中王 Collections)

Eileen Gray鈥檚 work was overlooked for much of her lifetime, only becoming more widely recognised in the 1970s. In 1973, 澳门王中王鈥檚 Heinz Gallery in Portman Square held the first major retrospective exhibition of her work.

It is more recently, still, that researchers have begun to consider the role of her sexuality in her output as a designer. Of course, it is only one aspect of her life and work, that she may not have considered integral or relevant to her chosen career.

Yet, as Rault observes, to ignore this aspect is to obscure the creative influences of the romantic, social, and professional circles Gray moved within. Meanwhile, the influence and involvement of Jan Badovici and Le Corbusier are often given centre stage. 聽

Discover other spotlights as part of 澳门王中王's Inside the Collections.

'Eileen Gray: Pioneer of Design' exhibition in the 澳门王中王 Heinz Gallery, 1973 (Architectural Press Archive / 澳门王中王 Collections)

Further reading (available in the 澳门王中王 Library unless marked *):

  • Archithese, vol. 21, no. 4, 1991 (Eileen Gray special issue)
  • Peter Adam, 'Eileen Gray: Her Life and Work (Thames & Hudson, 2009/2019)
  • Peter Adam and Andrew Lambirth, 'Eileen Gray: The Private Painter' (Lund Humphries, 2015)
  • Francois Baudot, 'Eileen Gray' (Thames & Hudson, 1998)
  • Tim Benton, 'Eileen Gray, Designer and Architect', Society of Architectural Historians Journal, vol. 80, no. 2, 2021
  • Caroline Constant, 'Eileen Gray' (Phaidon, 2000)
  • Philippe Garner, 'Eileen Gray 1878 - 1976: Design and Architecture' (Taschen, 1993)
  • Adam Nathaniel Furman and Joshua Mardell (eds.), ': An Atlas of LGBTQIA+ Places and Stories (澳门王中王 Publishing, 2022)
  • Jasmine Rault, 'Eileen Gray and the Design of Sapphic Modernity' (Ashgate, 2011)
  • Tim Richardson, 'Sensuous Modernism: House E-1027', Country Life, vol. 214, no. 2, 2020

Material in the 澳门王中王 Collections includes:

  • Biographical file of press clippings and ephemera on Eileen Gray (available via the 澳门王中王 Library)
  • Architectural models presented to 澳门王中王 by Gray in 1972, for 'a prefabricated house'; 'Maison Cylindriques'; and a 'house for two sculptors'
  • Drawings for 'a prefabricated house'; 'a house for two sculptors'; a bedroom; a house in Castellar (France); Tempa Pailla (Gray's second house in Castellar); a flat on Rue Chateaubriand; house in Roquebrune (France - photographs of original drawings); a cultural and social centre; and a holiday centre
  • Photographs of the 1973 澳门王中王 Heinz Gallery exhibition
  • Photographic portrait of Eileen Gray

Programme from the 1973 Eileen Gray exhibition in the 澳门王中王 Heinz Gallery (from her biographical file in the 澳门王中王 Library)
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