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Wells Coates

 
Art Encyclopedia: Wells (Wintemute) Coates

(b Tokyo, 17 Dec 1895; d Vancouver, 17 June 1958). English architect and designer of Canadian descent. The son of Canadian missionaries, he studied engineering at the University of British Columbia, Vancouver, and moved to London as a student in 1922. He became a journalist, frequented artistic circles and by 1927 had begun to design. Most of his executed designs date from the 1930s, the era of the MARS GROUP, of which he was a founder-member, and other manifestations of the rise of the English Modern Movement, in which he played a leading part. Although much of Coates's work as an interior designer has been destroyed, his major architectural works survive.

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Modern Design Dictionary: Wells Coates
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(1895-1958)

Coates was a leading figure in Modernism in Britain in the 1930s, recognized for his original contributions to architecture, interiors, furniture, fittings, and product design. His wide-ranging clients included the British Broadcasting Company (BBC), Isokon, Modernist furniture manufacturer PEL, progressive radio manufacturer Ekco (E. K. Cole), aircraft manufacturer De Havilland and the British Overseas Airways Corporation (BOAC). Born in Tokyo Coates travelled to Canada in 1913, where he commenced his studies in Mechanical and Structural Engineering at McGill University. After serving in the First World War he resumed his studies at the University of British Columbia, gaining a BA in 1919 and B.Sc. in Engineering in 1922, before moving to London to take a Ph.D. in ‘The Gases of the Diesel Engine’. He then pursued a career in journalism, visiting Paris and developing a strong interest in the work of Le Corbusier. His involvement with design began with the design of standardized shop fittings in plywood for the Crysede Silks shop in Cambridge in 1928, followed in 1929 by a factory interior in Welwyn Garden City for the innovative Cresta Silks company founded by Tom Heron. This led to a further commission for an inexpensive but modern standardized shop design for Cresta, resulting in the innovative Brompton Road outlet in London. This design was characterized by the abstracted lettering of the company name, constructed in metal and set in deep relief. Other progressive designers working for Cresta in this period included Edward McKnight Kauffer (stationery and packaging) and Paul Nash (textiles). In 1928 Coates had met Jack Pritchard of the Venesta Plywood Company, a fellow admirer of Le Corbusier and European Modernism. This resulted in the commission for what was to be one of the most celebrated of Coates's designs, the Lawn Road Flats in Hampstead, London, for which the designs were completed in 1932. Coates had been influenced by ideas of modern living in minimum spaces explored at the 1929 Congrès Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM) in Frankfurt. Coates's ideas of built-in furniture and fittings and ‘Minimum Kitchen’ for the Lawn Road Flats were displayed in the interior shown at the 1933 Industrial Art in Relation to the Home exhibition in London. Aimed at young professionals, in fact the Flats housed many Modernist émigrés from Nazi Germany including Walter Gropius, László Moholy-Nagy, and Marcel Breuer. Coates had also been commissioned, alongside Modernists Raymond McGrath and Serge Chermayeff, to design for the BBC and contributed innovative solutions for the Dramatic Effects and News Studios. Coates's commitment to the Modernist cause was further consolidated by his involvement in the foundation of Unit One in 1933, a pressure group of avant-garde artists and architects including sculptors Henry Moore and Barbara Hepworth, painters Ben Nicholson and Paul Nash, and architects Colin Lucas and Coates himself. He also played a key role in the formation in 1933 of the MARS (Modern Architectural Research) Group at the invitation of the CIAM. Coates also played an active role in furniture design at the time including tubular steel furniture for Hilmor and PEL that was used in another of his well-known blocks of apartments, Embassy Court in Brighton (1935). He also designed wooden furniture for Isokon, used in the Lawn Road Flats, and for P. E. Gane of Bristol. In terms of industrial products he also contributed a number of designs for Ekco including the highly popular Bakelite AD 65 radio of 1934 and PC1 Thermovent heater of 1937, cased in phenolic plastic. After the Second World War he continued to work on fresh ideas, exhibiting his Wingsail Catamaran prototype at the Britain Can Make It Exhibition of 1946 and designing the Telekinema and TV Pavilion for the South Bank site Festival of Britain in 1951. However, his post-war work never recaptured the sheer verve and originality of his design work and professional activity of the 1930s. His distinctive contribution was recognized in his appointment as Royal Designer for Industry (RDI) in 1944 and as Master of the Faculty of RDI in 1951.

Wikipedia: Wells Coates
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Wells Wintemute Coates OBE (December 17, 1895June 17, 1958) was an architect, designer and writer. He was, for most of his life, an ex-patriate Canadian architect who is best known for his work in England. His most notable work is the Isokon building in Hampstead, London.

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Early years

The oldest of six children, Wells Coates was born in Tokyo, Japan on December 17, 1895 to Methodist missionaries Sarah Agnes Wintemute Coates (1864-1945) and Harper Havelock Coates (1865-1934).

The young man's desire to be an architect was inspired by his mother, who had herself studied architecture under Louis Sullivan and planned one of the first missionary schools in Japan.[1]

Coates spent his youth in the Far East, and voyaged around the world with his father in 1913. He served in World War I, first as a gunner and later as a pilot with the Royal Air Force. From 1921 to 1924, he attended the University of British Columbia where he obtained BA and BSc degrees, and in 1924, he moved to London where he studied engineering (obtaining a PhD).[2] Among his first jobs in England was as a journalist and then with the design firm of Adams and Thompson in 1924. He established his own firm in 1928.

His childhood experiences in Japan would play an important role in his aesthetic sensibility that he brought to his architectural work, and this sensibility found a fitting outlet in the Modernist Movement, then current in Europe. He attended the 1933 Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM), which produced the famous Athens Charter, and was one of the founders, with Maxwell Fry, of the Modern Architectural Research Group (MARS), the British wing of CIAM.

Role as a Modernist

The Isokon Building

Wells embraced Le Corbusier's architectural mantra that buildings should be 'machines for living' (machine à habiter). The machine á habiter ideal was best-reflected in his Isokon building (also known as Lawn Road Flats), completed in 1934. Indeed, the architectural critic J. M. Richards suggested that he improved on Corbusier, coming "nearer to the machine á habiter than anything Corbusier ever designed". The building was compared to the exterior of an ocean liner by the novelist Agatha Christie, who lived there for a time, so clean and striking was the design.[3]

The apartment building was the brainchild of Jack and Molly Pritchard, who in 1931 established a design firm featuring Modernist architecture and furniture. With simple living spaces strongly influenced by Coates' Japanese experience, and including built-in Isokon furniture, Isokon was "an experiment in collective housing designed for left-wing intellectuals".[4] It became a haven for Germans escaping Nazi persecution and hosted many famous personages including Christie, Walter Gropius and Marcel Breuer.[5]

Isokon was ahead of its time: it won second place in Horizon Magazine's 'Ugliest Building Competition' in 1946, and would not be recognized as one of England's most important Modernist buildings for another decade. The building fell into disrepair by the 1990's but it changed ownership in 2001 and was fully restored by 2004.

Later achievements

10 Palace Gate, London

An inventive genius, Coates revelled in introducing new ideas in his work. Among his innovations was the '3-2' architectural plan, where two living rooms on one side of the building are equivalent in height to three rooms on the other side, making two units vertically on three floors. He also designed the "D-handle", a simple door handle design commonly employed, for example, in Scandinavian furniture. In 1930 he designed a studio for the British Broadcasting Corporation, and among his technical designs was a microphone stand featuring an overhead counterbalanced arm that enabled the microphone to be moved to any part of the studio while remaining perfectly balanced. The design became a standard piece of equipment at the BBC.[6] Coates also designed the distinctive round bakelite cabinets used by EKCO for some of its radios during the 1930s.[7]

The thirties were his most prolific era. The Isokon was immediately followed by Embassy Court in Brighton (1935) and 10 Palace Gate, Kensington (1939). These were the only apartment buildings he would design.[8] He also had several private home commissions.

This view of 10 Palace Gate illustrates Coates' 3-2 architectural plan.

During World War II, he again served with the RAF, this time working on fighter aircraft development, for which he was later awarded an OBE.[9] Following the war, he, like some other well known architects including Gropius and Breuer (by then working in America), contributed to the British post-War housing effort by introducing an early scheme for modular housing he called Room Unit Production.

In 1949-50, he designed the building of the Telekinema for the Festival of Britain's South Bank Exhibition. This 400-seat, state-of-the-art cinema, specially designed to screen both film (including the first 3-dimensional films) and large-screen television, proved one of the most popular attractions of the South Bank Exhibition in the summer of 1951. Operated and programmed by the British Film Institute, it re-opened as the National Film Theatre in October 1952, until its demolition in 1957 as the NFT was relocated a stone's throw away from its original site, under Waterloo Bridge.[10]

The Telekinema, 1951

He also designed a remarkable boat, called the Wingsail. It had a rigid sail design mounted on a catamaran hull. Though he formed a company to market the design, it was not a success, as both the sail and the catamaran were ahead of their time.

He is less well known for his planning work. In 1937, he undertook planning for a slum clearance in Britain (not implemented). [11] In Canada (1952-54) he prepared plans for Iroquois New Town on the St. Lawrence River in eastern Ontario which were also not implemented (the design was awarded to others).[12] He also prepared plans for a Toronto Island Redevelopment Project,[13] and was a participant in the Project 58 urban redevelopment scheme for Vancouver.

Final years in Canada

Coates began coming back to Canada in the early 1950's, about the time of the Iroquois project, finally settling there in 1957. In 1955 and 1956, he taught at the Graduate School of Design at Harvard with Walter Gropius but he was not happy there. He returned to Vancouver after two years, where he worked on Project 58. His last assignment was to design a monorail rapid transit system for Vancouver, dubbed the Monospan Twin-Ride System (MTRS). Once again, he was ahead of his time. The project was abandoned, but would be rejuvenated years later in another form known as SkyTrain.

Wells Coates died of a heart attack in Vancouver on June 17, 1958 at the age of 63.

Further reading

The University of East Anglia Library in Norwich has materials relating to his life and work. A list of the holdings is available on the World Wide Web.[14] Additional reference materials from the CIAM period are held at the CIAM Belgian Section of the Getty Research Institute.[15]

Coates' daughter, Laura Cohn, published a biography of her father called The Door to a Secret Room (Aldershot: Scolar Press, 1999) ISBN 1-84014-695-8.

References

  1. ^ [1] The Friends of Embassy Court
  2. ^ Wells Coates at the archINFORM database
  3. ^ [2] Open 2 (Open University)
  4. ^ [3] Chloë Théault, The historical myth of London during the 1930's
  5. ^ [4] V&A Museum, Isokon Penguin Donkey Bookcase
  6. ^ [5] Design Museum, Wells Coates, Architect and Designer
  7. ^ http://www.vam.ac.uk/images/image/1649-popup.html Wells Coates, 'ECKO Model AD-65' radio, 1932
  8. ^ [6] Friends of Embassy Court
  9. ^ [7] Ibid.
  10. ^ Well Coates, ‘Planning the Festival of Britain Telekinema’, in the Journal of the British Kinematograph Society, April 1951, pp.108-119
  11. ^ Wells Coates at the archINFORM database
  12. ^ [8] UBC Carol Coates Fonds
  13. ^ [9] Canada Architecture, Cumulative Index of the SSAC-SEAC Journal, Vol. 6 (1980)- Vol. 24 (1999)
  14. ^ [10] East Anglia Library
  15. ^ [11] Getty Research Institute

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Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
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