Designing Domesticity:

Decorating the American Home Since 1876

 

Broadbent Gallery
Kent State University Museum

December 5, 2001, to November 17, 2002

 

Guest Curators

Dr. Shirley Teresa Wajda
Department of History and Program in American Studies, College of Arts and Sciences

 

Dr. Terrence L. Uber
Program in Interior Design, School of Architecture and Environmental Design

 

 

 

 

 

The House Beautiful

(1870s)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A House For Everyone (1920s)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Modern Pioneer Homestead (1950s)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Millennial Mini

Mansion (2000s)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Exhibition Objects List Bibliography

Symposium, March 2001

Related Links

What makes a house a home?  For nearly two centuries, American critics and reformers have wrestled with that question.  Although Americans at the beginning of the nineteenth century lived in a variety of dwellings, by the even of the Civil War architects, social reformers and fiction writers were using their pens to forge an ideal of the suburban, single-family dwelling as the right way of living.  The family was the basic social unit of the State, these authors argued; the home was the place in which society and nation could be perfected.  Since that time, the nation's printing presses have never stopped in their production of plan books, architectural treatises, decorating and interior design guides, household advice manuals, house trade advertisement, and domestic fiction.  And Americans have never stopped reading this advice literature.  Or building, buying, renovation, or dreaming of, home.

Especially in eras of increased opportunity and prosperity, home ownership and stylish decoration have come to define what it is to be "middle class."  Designing Domesticity:  Decorating the American Home Since 1876 explores the relationship between interior design and family reform in four decades of relative growth:  the 1870s, the 1920s, the 1950s, and today.  In these decades, room arrangement changed and new rooms were created, reflecting changes in the nature of family.  How the family created the hospitable home--for their guests and for themselves--figures prominently in advice literature and in the types of goods American families purchased.  Style bespoke the family's knowledge of the canons of taste, and may be analyzed through the selection of wall treatments, furniture, ceramics, and dress.  As consumers, middle-class Americans balanced their quest for betterment by choosing affordable interpretations of high style, but they also remained true to the tenets of frugality, applying their own hands to create household furniture and other embellishments.  Balanced between the prescriptions of reformers and individual creativity, middle-class Americans made houses into homes by dint of hard work, helping to create--and renovate--a distinctly American ideal.  

Please click on one of the floor plans to the left to begin your tour.

This exhibition was made possible through a generous grant from the Faith and James Knight Foundation, with additional support provided by the Ohio Arts Council.  Media support provided by 89.7 WKSU-FM, a service of Kent State University.

Generous volunteers assisted with the construction and finishing of the exhibition's interiors:  Don Griffin (drywall), Bill Richards (paint), Terry Wajda (drywall), Jack Walton (trim), Wolfgang Wengler (special wall texturing).

Initial exhibition design was developed through the class in Interior Design Studio 5, Historic Interiors, Spring 2001, under Dr. Uber.

Exhibit installation:  Joseph Walton, Exhibitions Coordinator, Kent State University Museum, and Alastair Cameron-Hodges, Student Assistant

Material Culture Research Graduate Intern:  Pamela Dorazio Dean

This exhibition is an interdisciplinary collaboration between the Kent State University Museum; the Department of History and Program in American Studies, College of Arts and Sciences; and the Interior Design Program, the School of Architecture and Environmental Design.