
When I was teaching my youngest daughter, someone in my homeschool support group told me that World Magazine had a publication for children that was something like Weekly Reader, so I subscribed to both the adult and children's publications. I remember liking the magazine, but not much about it except that it had great book reviews, and one of the books they reviewed was
Home by Witold Rybczynski. So, I picked it up when I saw it at a book sale, and have started it three or four times over the past 20 years or so. I don't really know why I never finished it before, because I always thought it was interesting. I guess life just intervened--or maybe there was a novel I really wanted to read.
Rybczynski says on his
website that he . . .
. . . studied architecture at McGill
University in Montreal, where he also taught for twenty
years. He is Emeritus Professor of Urbanism at the University of Pennsylvania.
Rybczynski has designed and built houses as a registered architect, as well as
doing practical experiments in low-cost housing, which took him to Mexico, Nigeria,
India, the Philippines, and China. He has written for the Atlantic, New Yorker, New York Review of Books, and the
New York Times, and has been architecture critic for Saturday Night, Wigwag,
and Slate. From 2004 to 2012 he served on the U. S. Commission of Fine Arts.
I've always wondered how to pronounce his name, so I decided to see if I could find out on a YouTube video. In the first two videos, the person who introduced Rybczynski muffed his name, but in the third, I heard Rib-chin-ski, and lo and behold, that is what he says on the webpage. First name is pronounced Vee-told, by the way.
He has written (I believe) eighteen books, most of which deal with architecture, cities, furniture, and technology; and how they affect our lives both negatively and positively. There's a list
here. At this point, I would like to read all of them, but I only have one on my shelf,
The Most Beautiful House in the World, which tells the story of the building of his own house, and many rabbit trails that he followed in the process.
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| St. Jerome in his Study, Albrecht Dürer, 1514 |
In
Home Rybczynski tells how houses developed from the very public halls of the Middle Ages where family, servants, and apprentices lived, worked, ate, and slept in the same large room, to the sort of living conditions that we expect in our homes today. The unifying theme of the book is comfort, a word which was unknown in its present-day sense until Sir Walter Scott used it in the 18th century. Rybczynski says that before this there was no word that means what we mean by comfort, because the concept was not present in the minds of people who lived in earlier times.
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| Interior with a Woman Playing the Virginals, Emanuel de Witte, 1660 |
In his discussion of this development of the concept of
home as opposed to
house, Rybczynski includes the size, number and placement of rooms; and the types and placement of furniture; and how the change in the outward environment reflects the change in familial relationships, and vice versa. He shows how these changes spring from and lead to more intimacy, more privacy, and more comfort.
One of the most interesting parts of the book to me is the section on the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Until this time, there had been many changes in architectural style, and furnishing, but very few technological advances. This was due in part to the number of servants, even in middle class homes, who took care of all the inconvenient things, but it was also due to the fact that houses were built and furnished under the auspices of two groups of people: architects, who were more interested in the outside of the home and the way it looked, and upholsterers, who later came to be called interior designers, and who were contractors who took care of all the furniture and decoration of the inside. There just wasn't anyone in charge of making the house more convenient or comfortable.
A couple of things happened to bring about change. One was that there were fewer people--women mostly--who were willing to work as servants, and another was that women started writing books about house design. One of the most influential of these women was Christine Frederick, who believed in smaller, and servantless homes, and another was Catherine E. Beecher, the sister of Harriet Beecher Stowe. These women wrote about ways to make keeping house simpler. They designed kitchens that would work. They wanted furnaces in the basement and no fireplaces that had to be cleaned every day. They wanted electricity. Things started to change.
In chapter eight we learn about
The Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs en
Industriels Modernes, a world exhibition in Paris in which, ". . . . nearly two hundred buildings covered a seventy-five acre site . . . ." The name of the exhibit was the origin of the term Art Deco, and it was at this exposition that the style was introduced to the public. One pavilion that was not highly thought of was designed by Charles-Edouard and Pierre Jeanneret. Charles-Edouard was known as Le Corbusier, one of the first of the modern architects. You can see some of buildings here.
Rybczynski describes the pavilion.
Visitors to the pavilion would have found the interior as bare and unfinished as the exterior. There were no ornaments, no draperies, no wallpaper. There was no mantelpiece to display the family photographs, no paneling in the study. There was no polished wood, let alone lapis lazuli. The color scheme was stark: predominantly white walls contrasted with a blue ceiling; one wall of the living room was painted brown; the storage cabinets that served as room dividers were painted bright yellow. The effect was distinctly unhomey, and was heightened by the staircase, which was made out of steel pipes and looked as if it had been plucked directly from a ship's boiler room.
While the pavilion did not attract much attention at the exposition, between the wars the minimalist fashion gained more traction. Rybczynski gives a few reasons for this. One was the stock market crash which left people without the means to spend money on decoration. The other was political. Neo-classicism was preferred by both Hitler and Mussolini. The new stripped-down style acquired an almost moral imperative. Modern German architects who came to the United States to escape the Nazis, became very influential in the architectural world. The ordinary American wasn't that impressed, Rybczynski says.
Buildings in the stripped-down style were grudgingly accepted on the assumption that they were "functional" and "efficient." . . . Although the architectural profession and its supporters extolled the moral virtues of the New Spirit, to the man on the street it was just another unpleasant, but inevitable by-product of modern life, like traffic jams or plastic forks.
Here are a couple of examples of the furniture of the
New Spirit.
The Hardoy Butterfly Chair designed by Jorge Ferrari Hardoy
Still on the market from a blue plush one at $40 up to a leather original for a couple of thousand.
The Wassily Chair designed by Marcel Breuer. You can still get these, too.
I saw an original for $33,000, and the high quality new ones run in the thousands,
but don't worry, you can get on from Walmart for $221.06.
Think how useful they would be during Lent.
Rybczynski pushes back against this
New Spirit style because of its retreat from the comfortable and intimate. You can't really imagine snuggling into these chairs with a cup of coffee and good book, or a congenial conversation around the fire. His objections aren't just with the look of things, but with the way they affect the way we relate to one another, and the way we live.
There was one thing about the book that really frustrated me, and that was the lack of pictures. The only illustrations are pictures at the beginning of each chapter, two of them are above. We have all this talk about different types of architecture, and woodwork, and furniture, etc., and no pictures. I found myself constantly reaching for my Kindle Fire to look them up. Pity the poor reader who bought the book in 1986 when there was no such thing as a search engine. Maybe this was because it was Rybczynski's first book and the publisher didn't want to pay for illustrations.
I really enjoyed this book. I guess that's obvious. I'm looking forward to reading more of Rybczynski's work.
AMDG