The Architectural Imagination and the Colonial Tasmanian Homestead

Stuart King
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Abstract

ABSTRACT Colonial homesteads occupy a pivotal place within Australian architectural historiography: claiming country, adapting to the continent’s environmental conditions, and as pastoral and agricultural enterprises generating wealth they were a focus of self-conscious architectural endeavour. Their making was supported by diffuse networks of financial, cultural and social capital comprising the British Empire, which Harriet Edquist has observed can be belied by “popular representations of Australian homesteads as isolated objects within an abstract landscape.” This article presents a reading of Ratho, an early homestead in Tasmania, from the perspective of its occupants and, especially, one daughter, Jane (née Reid) Williams, whose own story points to the complex webs of Empire that informed colonial experience and homestead building. It uses personal letters, diary entries and reminiscences to highlight the incremental design of the homestead in social settings, over water and on land, and to contextualise apparent allusions to originary architectural thinking in the building’s idiosyncratic Grecian colonnade which comprises knotted tree trunks fashioned as Ionic columns. The article explores a mode of architectural history attentive to the lived experiences of a colonial Tasman world.
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建筑想象与塔斯马尼亚殖民地的家园
摘要殖民地宅地在澳大利亚建筑史上占据着举足轻重的地位:占领国家,适应大陆的环境条件,作为创造财富的牧业和农业企业,它们是自觉建筑努力的焦点。它们的形成得到了包括大英帝国在内的分散的金融、文化和社会资本网络的支持,Harriet Edquist观察到,“澳大利亚宅地作为抽象景观中的孤立物体的流行表现”可以掩盖这一点,尤其是一个女儿Jane(née Reid饰)Williams,她自己的故事指向了帝国的复杂网络,这些网络为殖民经历和家园建设提供了信息。它使用个人信件、日记和回忆来突出宅地在社会环境、水上和陆地上的增量设计,并将建筑独特的希腊柱廊中对原始建筑思想的明显暗示置于背景中,该柱廊由造型为爱奥尼亚柱的打结树干组成。本文探讨了一种关注塔斯曼殖民地世界生活体验的建筑史模式。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
25.00%
发文量
26
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