Johanna Eleanor Ferguson

IF 0.1 0 ARCHITECTURE
M. Kuipers
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引用次数: 0

摘要

多才多艺的Johanna Eleanor Ferguson(1900-1982)出生于上海,在代尔夫特理工学院接受培训,是荷兰最早的女建筑师之一。1926年,她在布雷达附近自行设计的平顶房子里获得了工程师学位,当时她已经结婚。随后,她为母亲设计了瓦赫宁根的De Huif芦苇覆盖的房子(1927年),为父亲设计了乌得勒支附近的两栋几乎相同的平顶房子(1928年和1935年)。与此同时,她生下了两个孩子,并与第一任丈夫离婚。1932年末,她搬到古伊地区,加入了一个神智派社区。就在这里,她嫁给了她的第二任丈夫。为了寻找更好的视角,这个年轻的家庭于1935年底移民到约翰内斯堡。一年后,埃莉诺·弗格森在南非正式注册为建筑师。1938年,在又一次离婚后,她与当地建筑师Stakesby Lewis一起开始了一项联合实践,后者成为了她的第三任丈夫,并分享了她对神智学的兴趣。她以娘家姓工作,担任首席设计师,而他则是建筑商。该公司不仅负责郊区的各种“Wrightian”别墅和房屋(例如Cotesloe的A.J.Du Plessis),还负责商业区典型的现代商业建筑,如带有锥形蘑菇柱的August House。1948年,Conrad Sayce成为该机构的合伙人,该机构总部设在华盛顿大厦。公司的扩张可能是由于埃莉诺在设计工作的同时增加了社交活动。继Clara Codd和Jan Kruisheer之后,她被任命为南部非洲神学学会的全国主席(1946年至53年),并在该职位上进行了广泛的演讲。她还为约翰内斯堡的一个新小屋做了一个精心的无偿设计,但从未执行。相反,Stakesby Lewise夫妇将一座现有的别墅改建为“神智圣殿”,于1951年落成。两年后,他们迁移到前罗德西亚的索尔兹伯里(现哈拉雷),开始了一项新的联合实践,主要致力于建造私人平房,并扩展神智网络。1961年中期,为了应对日益增长的政治和经济不确定性,这对夫妇最终定居在英国,住在坎伯利Tekels Park庄园的一个神智派社区。因此,Ferguson设计了两栋相邻的房子,一栋为她自己和丈夫设计,另一栋为她的大女儿一家设计(Loveday)。1972年,Stakesby Lewises一家搬到了庄园里另一栋自行设计的平房(离高速公路更远),埃莉诺在经历了漫长而多事的生活后于1982年去世。直到最后,她仍然为自己的代尔夫特工程师头衔感到骄傲。
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Johanna Eleanor Ferguson
The multi-talented Johanna Eleanor Ferguson (1900-1982), born in Shanghai but trained at the Delft Institute of Technology, was one of the first female architects in the Netherlands. From her self-designed flat-roofed house near Breda she obtained her engineer’s degree in 1926 as an already married woman. Subsequently she designed the reed-covered house De Huif in Wageningen for her mother (1927) and two almost identical flat-roofed houses near Utrecht for her father (1928 and 1935). Meanwhile she had given birth to two children and divorced her first husband, and in late 1932 she relocated to the Gooi region to join a theosophist community. It was while here that she married her second husband. Looking for better perspectives, the young family emigrated to Johannesburg at the end of 1935. One year later, Eleanor Ferguson was formally registered as an architect in South Africa. In 1938, after another divorce, she started a joint practice together with a local architect, Stakesby-Lewis who became her third husband and shared her interest in theosophy. She worked under her maiden name as the principal designer and he as the builder. The firm was responsible not only for various ‘Wrightian’ cottages and houses in the suburbs (for example, for A.J. Du Plessis at Cottesloe), but also for typically modern commercial buildings in the business districts, such as August House with its conical mushroom columns. In 1948 Conrad Sayce  became a partner in the practice, which was based in Washington House. The expansion of the firm was presumably prompted by Eleanor’s increasing social activities alongside the design work. Following in the footsteps of Clara Codd and Jan Kruisheer, she was appointed National President of the Theosophical Society in southern Africa (1946–53) in which capacity she lectured widely. She also made an elaborate pro bono design for a new Lodge in Johannesburg, but this was never executed. Instead, the Stakesby-Lewises converted an existing villa into a ‘theosophical temple’, inaugurated in 1951. Two years later, they migrated to Salisbury (now Harare) in former Rhodesia to start a new joint practice, mainly focused on building private bungalows, and to extend the theosophical network. In mid-1961, in response to the growing political and economic uncertainty, the couple finally settled in England where they lived amongst a theosophist community on the Tekels Park Estate in Camberley.  The estate was accordingly expanded by two neighbouring houses designed by Ferguson, one for herself and her husband, the other for her eldest daughter’s family (Loveday). In 1972 the Stakesby-Lewises moved to another self-designed bungalow on the estate (further away from the motorway) where Eleanor passed away in 1982 after a long and eventful life. Until the very end she remained proud on her Delft engineer’s title.
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Bulletin KNOB
Bulletin KNOB ARCHITECTURE-
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