ABSTRACT

Appropriated Interiors uncovers the ways interiors participate explicitly and implicitly in embedded cultural and societal values and explores timely emergent scholarship in the fields of interior design history, theory, and practice.

What is "appropriate" and "inappropriate" now? These are terms with particular interest to the study of the interior. Featuring thirteen original curated essays, Appropriated Interiors explores the tensions between normative interiors that express the dominant cultural values of a society and interiors that express new, changing, and even transgressive values. With case studies from the late eighteenth century to the twenty-first century, these historians, theorists, and design practitioners investigate the implications of interior design as it relates to politics, gender, identity, spatial abstraction, cultural expression, racial expression, technology, and much more.

An informative read for students and scholars of design history and theory, this collection considers the standards, assumptions, codes, and/or conventions that need to be dismantled and how we can expand our understanding of the history, theory, and practice of interior design to challenge the status quo.

chapter |13 pages

Introduction

section Section I|69 pages

Small

chapter |1 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|14 pages

Duvet Entendre

Getting in Bed with the Continentals

chapter 2|19 pages

“This Is How We Live”

[In]Appropriate Rooms: Nonconformist Apartment Exhibitions and the Case of the Communal Apartment, 1982–1984

chapter 4|14 pages

A ‘Proper’ Home

Channeling Political Values through Interior Design in a Dictatorship

section Section II|66 pages

Medium

chapter |1 pages

Introduction

chapter 5|14 pages

The Queer White Cube

The Art of Contemporary Queer Interventionist Interiors

chapter 6|12 pages

Appropriation or Appreciation

A New/COVID Street View

chapter 7|17 pages

Oblique/Interior

chapter 8|20 pages

Ponte City, Johannesburg

A History of Appropriation and the Appropriation of History

section Section III|79 pages

Large

chapter |1 pages

Introduction

chapter 9|14 pages

Art and “Architecture Afloat”

Orient Line and the Avant-Garde

chapter 10|15 pages

Regenerative Debris

Re-Collage and the Collective Memory of the Cut

chapter 11|22 pages

Inner-Propriations

Degrowing the Interior

chapter 12|25 pages

Stalled! Restrooms

Inclusive Design through a Cross-Disciplinary Lens