 serial: #8080 Ralph Blakelock, CHEYENNE ENCAMPMENT (1873) courtesy of Portland Art Museum, gift in memory of Moulton Loyal Andrus. |
|
When we refer to “domestic architecture,” we mean the spaces that people create or shape to serve as their homes. A domestic space does not have to be a western-style single family house—it can be a cave, a castle, a tipi, an apartment, or a small corner within a larger dwelling. The almost infinite variety of spaces that qualify as domestic architecture makes clear that there is nothing universal or absolute about any one concept of “home.”
|