Week 11: Curtaining the Curtain-wall

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Curtaining the Curtain Wall Traversing the Boundaries of the American Postwar Domestic Environment

Frank Bros Advertisement from Arts & Architecture, June 1953


Architects typically repudiate curtains, believing that this element that modulates vision compromises the architect’s conception, obscuring and softening the precise geometry of architectural forms. Decorators, for their part, consider curtains essential; veiling sunlight and views, curtains make domestic privacy possible and offer relief from the austere spaces created by architects often obsessed with form at the expense of comfort. Joel Sanders, “Curtain Wars: Architects, Decorators, and the Twentieth-Century Domestic Interior,� Harvard Design Magazine no.16 (Winter/Spring 2002):14-20.


George Nelson and Henry Wright, Tomorrow’s House (New York: Simon and Schuster, Inc., 1945)


George Nelson and Henry Wright, Tomorrow’s House (New York: Simon and Schuster, Inc., 1945)


“The American’s house was never his castle; it does not even afford him privacy. Although one is more or less familiar with his frustrations, nobody ever thought to impute them, at least partly, to his house. So mixed up is he that he is losing track of its very functions…The livingroom has been turned into the meanest sort of auditorium, unfit for conviviality, and probably no other civilization has produced gardens as melancholy as ours; aesthetics apart, our suburban front lawns and backyards are a gigantic waste of potential outdoor living space.” Bernard Rudofsky, Behind the Picture Window (New York: Oxford University Press, 1955), 6-8. Advertisement for Thermopane windows, from Architecurral Forum, August 1949


Panaview Advertisement from Arts & Architecture, December1954


“Views were not just compared to paintings, photomurals, and scenic wallpaper, they were kin: all were media that organized visible light into a brand of scenery available to enhance a sense of interior space.” Sandy Isenstadt, The Modern American House: Spaciousness and Middle Class Identity (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2006), 233.

“A Tree-Shaded House in Town,” from Richard Neutra, Mystery & Realities of the Site (New York: Morgan & Morgan, 1951), 48.


“Fortisan by Celanese� advertisement, Interiors, January 1956, pp.36-37.


Mary Roche, “Bringing in the View,” New York Times (March 30, 1947)


Not so long ago a window was simply a square hole in the wall. It was supposed to serve a number of purposes, but adding grace and beauty to the room was not one of them. Nor was it the focal point, the gathering place for people in the room…All this has changed. In the contemporary home, tremendous stress is placed on “fenestration” … The window has acquired a new place and purpose in the whole scheme of living. Dorothy Liebes, “Enhancing the View,” New York Times (October 3, 1948).


Philip Johnson, arch., Davis House, Wayzata, Minnesota, 1954; Richard Kelly, lighting design


Aurora by Columbia, advertisement, Interiors, August 1955, p.83

Columbia Mills, advertisement, Interiors, November1955, p.68


Richard Kelly, Curtains with imbedded electric lights, Kelly Apartment, New York City, ca. 1958


Philip Johnson, arch., Four Seasons Bar and Grill Room, Seagram Building, New York City, 1958; curtains by Marie Nichols; Richard Kelly, lighting design Photograph: Hagen Stier


Fine Fabrics, advertisement, Interiors, January 1955, p.34.

William A. Burden Apartment, Philip Johnson, architectural renovation; Richard Kelly,, lighting design; New York City, 1954


“The association of women with private space and domesticity is not simply reflected in the practice of interior decoration but actively produced by it.” Peter McNeil, “Designing Women: Gender, Sexuality, and the Interior Decorator, c.1890-1940” Art History no.4 (December, 1994): 631-657.

Anton Maix Fabric Advertisement, Interiors, October, 1955, pp.81


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