The Modern Interior

(Wang) #1

Views from around 1913 inside Ford’s Highland Park factory show that


the rationality and efficiency of the work process remained overriding


preoccupations. In that context the appearance of the interior, like those


in Benjamin’s arcades, was achieved as a solution to a problem. Only at


the managerial level did domestic details make an appearance in the


factory at that time. The superintendent’s office at Highland Park, for


example, revealed the addition of a few personalized details – a photo on


the wall and a clock among them – which offset the otherwise basic


austerity and functionality of that overtly masculine workspace.


The office was scrutinized in a similar way to the factory in the


early twentieth century. Indeed it has been claimed that the changes made


to the office environment as a result of the process of rationalization


were ‘more profound than those in factories’.^27 Another work-based


space determined almost exclusively by function, rather than by aesthetics


or taste, the office resembled the factory in many ways. It did not focus


on the production of manufactured goods, however, but rather on the 123


The Wheeler & Wilson Sewing Machine Factory, illustrated in Scientific American, 3 May
1879.

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