Last chance to see: Power, women and architectural drawings at RIBA’s ‘Radical Rooms’

‘Radical Rooms: Power of the plan’ opened at the RIBA in London in May, discussing the role of power and women in architecture through history, in particular in the development of residential floorplans; and now the show has been extended, reopening for a limited period between 5 – 24 September

Two women wearing geometric theatrical costumes
(Image credit: press)

A new exhibition has just launched at London’s RIBA headquarters. ‘Radical Rooms: Power of the plan’ is an immersive show, celebrating the often neglected role of women in architecture through history – as designers and commissioners, something that was also recently flagged up in the renaming of Mies van der Rohe's Edith Farmsworth House in the US. Created as a collaboration between architect Charles Holland and artist Di Mainstone, the exhibition combines drawings and drama, featuring not only architectural plans and photography from the RIBA’s rich archive, but also an audio-visual element full of colour, theatre costumes and performances, which bring the displays to life in a captivating way. 

The concept of the show, draws on ‘an alternative history of female protagonists Bess of Hardwick, Jane and Mary Parminter and Patty Hopkins’, its authors explain. Using Hardwick Hall, A La Ronde and Hopkins House (three key British houses created respectively by Bess, the Parminters and Hopkins) as case studies, Holland and Mainstone explore the power these women had in shaping the domestic floorplan, and how the particular homes helped challenge conventions in residential architecture.

Exhibition view of radical rooms show at RIBA

(Image credit: press)

The examples span time periods and styles, with Hardwick Hall being from 1597, A La Ronde from the 18th century, and Hopkins House from 1976. Yet, they were all seminal in their design, inspiring change in their time and beyond. ‘The starting point was an essay by [architect and historian] Robin Evans, where he traces the history of the corridor – a seemingly banal element which has profound impact in things like privacy and social segregation,' Holland explains. This led to in-depth investigations into the development of the floorplan of British homes across time – and the female figures that instigated it.

The exhibition is delightfully and thoughtfully animated by specially commissioned pieces of film showing poetic, alternative versions of the four women, dressed in geometric and colourful costumes, drawing the visitor in through sound and movement. The aforementioned houses, and many more, are arranged around these films, with drawings hidden behind curtains in a way that allows the guest to explore the displays at their own pace, offering a sense of both mystery and discovery. ‘It’s not meant to have a didactic linear order,’ Holland says.

view of Radical Rooms show at RIBA

(Image credit: press)

two women wearing theatre costumes

(Image credit: press)

Woman wearing theatre costume

(Image credit: press)

Woman wearing geometric costume

(Image credit: press)

Dancing woman in theatre costume

(Image credit: press)

INFORMATION

‘Radical Rooms: Power of the Plan' is currently on show at RIBA's headquarters, 66 Portland Pl, London. The exhibition is open by appointment only during August, and to all 5-24 September 2022 during the following hours: 

architecture.com

Ellie Stathaki is the Architecture & Environment Director at Wallpaper*. She trained as an architect at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki in Greece and studied architectural history at the Bartlett in London. Now an established journalist, she has been a member of the Wallpaper* team since 2006, visiting buildings across the globe and interviewing leading architects such as Tadao Ando and Rem Koolhaas. Ellie has also taken part in judging panels, moderated events, curated shows and contributed in books, such as The Contemporary House (Thames & Hudson, 2018), Glenn Sestig Architecture Diary (2020) and House London (2022).