Abstract
This thesis examines the relationship between designer Pipsan Saarinen Swanson's work in interiors
and mass-produced furnishings. I assess how her career progressed from interior decorating, a field
with many women, into areas of mass-production design with little female representation, namely
furniture, lamp, metalware, and glassware. I also explore how her interiors, designed for individual
clients, developed into product lines as well as brand identities aimed at national audiences. Part I of
this thesis analyses Pipsan Saarinen Swanson's early design activities, including her entrance into
interior decorating in 1929. Parts II through IV focus on three lines of furnishings designed by her
in partnership with various male architects in her family. I demonstrate that her interior decorating
work drew her incrementally into and prepared her for mass-production work. Additionally,
collaborations helped her access certain design fields and also served as gateways to independent
projects. Released between 1940 and 1955, the three furnishing lines each grew out of her interiors
work and, as I argue, each represented a different phase of her career in terms of her development
as a designer and her visibility within family partnerships. Pipsan Saarinen Swanson's renowned
father provided her with vital opportunities, but she struggled to step out of the shadow he cast over
her public image. On the other hand, she relentlessly uplifted her lesser-known husband, sometimes
at the expense of independent recognition. I conclude that her forays into male-dominated territory
were rooted in and nurtured her work in interiors; by foregrounding her domestic interiors, she
anchored her career in a realm normalized as feminine. My analysis shows that her mass-produced
furnishing designs closely related to her interiors stylistically. Mediating channels, however, reframed
the furnishings to better appeal to middle-class American consumers. In marketing and press, the
three lines assumed identities that spoke to the times they were released: the late Depression, when
discussions about shared American values poured out of popular media; immediately after World
War II, when business and political elites promoted individuality, diversity, and teamwork as
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defining American qualities; and the early Cold War, when influential design writers promulgated a
revisionist history of modern design, relocating its supposed origins to pre-1900 America.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Qualification | Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) |
| Awarding Institution |
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| Supervisors/Advisors |
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| Publication status | Accepted/In press - May 2022 |
| Externally published | Yes |
Bibliographical note
Physical Location: Online Only.Keywords
- History of art, architecture and design
PhD type
- Standard route