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The woman who almost got written out of architectural history

The woman who almost got written out of architectural history

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I sit down with Spanish architect and academic Carmen Espegel to explore the life and work of Eileen Gray, with a particular focus on the complexities of authorship, identity, and gender within architectural history.

Carmen offers an incisive reading of Villa E-1027 not just as a physical space, but as an architectural manifesto — one where form, emotion, and politics are deeply intertwined. We discuss Gray’s design intelligence, her artistic independence, and the cultural dynamics that led to her marginalisation for much of the 20th century.

This is a conversation about recognition: how architecture is credited, who gets remembered, and how we begin to set the record straight.

Key Topics:

● The originality of Eileen Gray’s architectural vision

● The politics of authorship and gender in modernism

● Carmen’s academic work on restoring Gray’s legacy

● How space and identity intersect in architectural history

● Villa E-1027 as a manifesto for modern domesticity


Guest Info:

Carmen Espegel is a practising architect and professor at ETSAM Madrid, whose work focuses on collective housing, gender studies, and the re-reading of modernist history through a critical feminist lens.


Quotes from the Episode:

On Gray’s authorship: "This house was not co-authored. Villa E-1027 was entirely Eileen Gray’s vision."

On architecture and gender: "Architecture is never neutral. It reflects the hand and the gaze of its author — and historically, that gaze has been overwhelmingly male."

On setting the record straight: "We don’t need to invent heroes. We just need to tell the truth about the ones we ignored."


Website: www.jameshamiltonarchitects.com

Instagram: @jameshamiltonarchitects

Production: OneFinePlay.com

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