The Architectress
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About The Book

A Glasgow townhouse holds within its walls the essence of Gertrudes lost mother Ailsa someone she has been denied all knowledge of for as long as she can remember. All she has is a photograph of a young woman dressed in furs and the recurring dream of a woman in a white house. The discovery in 1940 of an attic room which her controlling father has always kept locked reveals a living space with a drawing board that has been used as a refuge at one time. Meanwhile in 1909 Ailsa Bray is a young and unworldly Scot brought together with bohemian Dutch socialite Truus Schräder in the heady social and political climate of Edwardian London by a mutual interest in design. At nineteen Truus is already advocating an unconventional style of family living deemed scandalous at the time and will go on in 1924 to inspire and collaborate in the development of the first truly modern house the Rietveld Schröder House in Utrecht with her lover and kindred spirit De Stijl architect Gerrit Rietveld. The two women consolidate a bond of friendship and shared ideals: to live simple lives unfettered by societys norms and to design homes where women are freed from the trappings of domestic work and children flourish in open loving and stimulating environments. Ailsa becomes the first woman to study architecture in the creative surroundings and culture of the new Mackintosh designed Glasgow School of Art and later exiled through the Great War in the neutral Netherlands under a Dutch modernist. She finally achieves her dream of an independent professional life with her daughter when their world falls apart. From wartime Aberdeen to post war London fleeing a scandal Gertrude finally returns to Glasgow in 1984 to renovate the townhouse where she feels a connection with her mother. Her life is turned upside down when a letter arrives from the Netherlands asking her to make contact at the earliest opportunity. This story told through the dual narrative of mother and daughter has as its backdrop a century of design from the Glasgow Style The Early Modernists post war British Industrial Design to 21st Century Minimalism as it ebbs and flows back and forth across the North Sea between Glasgow Aberdeen London and the Netherlands. It tells of loss and redemption through a century of change for women and the price paid by one who dared to inhabit a profession wholly owned by men.
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