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Architect Drawings : A Selection of Sketches by World Famous Architects Through History

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Gray, Eileen (1879–1976)<br />

Plan, section and elevation, V&A Picture Library, AAD/1980/9/16, 10 8 in., Pencil on paper<br />

Best known for her lacquer work, carpet weaving, and interior design, Eileen Gray built several architectural<br />

projects in the early years <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century. Despite her lack <strong>of</strong> a formal architectural<br />

education, her sketches and drawings show an understanding <strong>of</strong> architectural space, and her buildings,<br />

a sensitivity for materials.<br />

Gray was born in Ireland as Kathleen Eileen Moray Smith. Her higher education began at the<br />

Slade School <strong>of</strong> Fine Arts in London. In 1902, she moved to Paris to study drawing, and the same<br />

year encountered the restoration <strong>of</strong> antique lacquer with D. Charles in London. Having inherited<br />

sufficient wealth to be independent, in 1907 she returned to Paris to work with the Japanese lacquer<br />

master, Seizo Sugawara. By 1910, Gray established a lacquer workshop and a weaving atelier. She<br />

opened a decorating shop called Jean Désert in 1922, receiving commissions for interior design. Near<br />

this time, she met Jean Badovici, an architectural critic and editor who had received formal education<br />

in architecture. He encouraged her talents in architecture and between 1926 and 1929 she built<br />

a house for herself and Badovici in the south <strong>of</strong> France at Roquebrune. Literature establishes that they<br />

collaborated on this house, but that Gray designed the project and Badovici’s role was that <strong>of</strong> critic<br />

(Constant and Wang, 1996). The house was titled E. 1027 Maison en bord de mer. Located on the<br />

shore, the design reflected Le Corbusier’s tenets <strong>of</strong> modern architecture. The house was set on piloti,<br />

organized in an open plan with a terrace overlooking the sea. Gray designed the furniture, successfully<br />

integrating it with the architecture. Her architectural work includes another house for herself,<br />

the Tempe à pailla in Castellar, several apartment renovations in Paris, and numerous unbuilt projects<br />

(Hecker and Müller, 1993; Constant, 2000; Constant and Wang, 1996).<br />

This sketch page (Figure 7.13) dates approximately from the 1930s and presents a plan for an art<br />

gallery (Constant and Wang, 1996). It references alterations made for her Vacation and Leisure Center<br />

(Exhibition Pavilion) in Le Corbusier’s Pavilion des Temps Nouveaux. The pencil sketch shows a ruled<br />

floor plan with a small section to the right and a faint elevation on the left. The page contains several<br />

notes, dimensions, proportional guidelines, and an outlined lozenge shape. This approximate ellipse<br />

constitutes the spatial theme <strong>of</strong> the project, and reflects her concept for circulation through the space.<br />

In a fairly small room, Gray was studying sophisticated solutions to lighting the surfaces <strong>of</strong> the exhibition.<br />

The section shows a diagram for light to be emitted from a clerestory. The skylights, situated<br />

directly above the sculptures in the center, provide an additional source <strong>of</strong> illumination. The openings<br />

in the walls have been set at forty-five degree angles to experiment with reflected light bouncing <strong>of</strong>f<br />

diagonal surfaces.<br />

Gray was walking through the experience <strong>of</strong> the space with her pencil. She used arrows for the<br />

intended direction <strong>of</strong> the visitors’ movement. She also employed wavy parallel lines to express the width<br />

<strong>of</strong> the flow around and between the display panels. In this way, she was visually questioning the scale <strong>of</strong><br />

the spaces. This also provided an indication <strong>of</strong> the way observers would perceive the exhibition panels.<br />

This zigzag path was a method to move people through the gallery and to provide as much wall area for<br />

artwork as possible. Understanding how artwork requires indirect illumination, Gray could envision the<br />

light permeating the space from behind the visitors <strong>by</strong> inhabiting the sketch herself. Sketched lightly in<br />

the center she even locates the placement <strong>of</strong> these objects. The development and evaluation <strong>of</strong> the<br />

project occurred as she sketched and allowed her to project herself into the proposed interior space.<br />

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