In this new series on Arts&Crafts hosted by Daniel Stilwell, we will unite voices from architectural and social history with architectural practitioners who engage with the Arts & Crafts in a contemporary light. Each speaker will showcase lesser-known characters and the wider artistic community within the Arts & Crafts, as well as offer freshly made views of canonically prominent architects of the time.
This talk explores a building study of 102 Wilbury Road, Letchworth Garden City, designed by Barry Parker of the Parker and Unwin Partnership (1896-1914) in 1908 for his younger brother and wife, Stanley and Signe Parker.It also situates several works of art by the Camden Town artist William Ratcliffe, who was not only a friend of the Parkers but a frequent house guest of 102 Wilbury Road.
This talk explores the domestic work of Barry Parker of the Parker and Unwin Partnership (1896-1914) as both straightforward and simple. It will argue that his work over an established career can be seen as a matured and refined expression of one that has evolved across his domestic work, both as groups of cottages but also in individual houses. It will use key essays from The Art of Building a Home and The Craftsman Magazine to illustrate Parker’s method and approach. It firmly situates Parker as an Architect in the first instance rather than as a planner as the Partnership was famously known as. The talk will then show and give evidence of this approach through a building study of 102 Wilbury Road in Letchworth Garden City, the house designed by Barry Parker of in 1908 for his younger brother and wife, Stanley and Signe Parker. It will illuminate his intent and bring attention to how Parker deals with construction, the inglenook and the myriad furniture he designed. The talk will finish with an interrogation of Camden Town artist William Ratcliffe’s oil paintings The Red Curtain and The Artist’s Room depicting the interior of 102 Wilbury Road. These along with several other studies were painted whilst he stayed with the Parkers. These paintings not only show Barry Parker’s architecture in a vibrant new light but also explore the material qualities and lived domesticity as well as the spatial complexities of the soft furnishings depicted adorning the room’s surfaces in the painting.
Daniel Stilwell is an Architectural Historian and works for Charles Holland Architects. He is the convenor of this series of talks on the Arts and Crafts. His most recent research on the home, domestic life and comfort have led him to write about the linguistic history of comfort in British domestic architecture. He is also writing about the Arts and Craft Architect Barry Parker’s domestic work in Letchworth Garden City. Daniel lectures in Contextual Studies and Architecture Design History and Theory at Central Saint Martins, UAL and at Canterbury School of Architecture respectively. Daniel studied both BA and M.Arch Architecture at Canterbury School of Architecture along with an Erasmus Exchange at the Bauhaus Universität in Weimar. More recently, he completed an MA in Architectural History at the Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL.
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