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Building the modern kitchen

Architecture exhibit "My Mother's Kitchen" runs until May 18

- May 14, 2014

"My Mother's Kitchen's" display on the Frankfurt kitchen, popularized in Germany in the 1920s. (Photos Ryan McNutt/provided)
"My Mother's Kitchen's" display on the Frankfurt kitchen, popularized in Germany in the 1920s. (Photos Ryan McNutt/provided)

A motherā€™s kitchen is full of smells and sights: stocked cupboards, boiling soups, chopped vegetables and a sink full of clattering dishes. Itā€™s a place of perspiration and inspiration.

Sarah Bonnemaison found herself inspired the moment she walked into her motherā€™s new-to-her kitchen in Marseille, France.

ā€œMy mother moved into this famous building in the south of France, a UnitĆ© dā€™Habitation designed after the Second World War,ā€ explains the Dal Architecture professor. ā€œIt was a big apartment building and the kitchens are very small, but beautifully designed. She walked in and the kitchens were original; even the icebox was still there.

ā€œIā€™m an architectural historian so I thought, ā€˜I have to do something with this.ā€

What Dr. Bonnemaison developed was My Motherā€™s Kitchen, an interactive installation currently open to the public in Sexton Campusā€™ Medjuck Building. It traces the emergency of the modernist kitchen through early ergonomics and three different moments in history.

ā€œItā€™s really a story of origins,ā€ she says.

Visitors can explore a multimedia display on the Frankfurt kitchen, a modernist approach popularized in 1920s Germany and so novel at the time that it required an instructional film to support it. (Clips from the film are visible as part of the display) Then, guests can learn about the work of Mary Arnold, who helped the miners of Reserve Mines, Nova Scotia establish a housing co-op and build their own residences in whatā€™s known as the ā€œTompskinsvilleā€ project. The exhibit also includes an artistic recreation of Dr. Bonnemaisonā€™s motherā€™s kitchen in Marseille and an interactive digital experience where visitors can experiment with building the kitchen of the future.

The three historical kitchens were all designed by women, for women, but their values evolved over time: from efficiency, to co-operation, to quality of life.

ā€œIā€™m amazed by how little we think about kitchen design, in terms of current desires for sustainability and organice produce, but at the same time, see how much money people put into it, says Dr. Bonnemaison. ā€œI hope the exhibit gets people thinking about how the kitchen as evolved and where it might go in the future.ā€

This past weekend, the School of Architecture hosted Mind Into Matter, a symposium based around the exhibition and the work of its various collaborators, including Derek Reilly of the Faculty of Computer Science and faculty at NSCAD and other institutions. It included a dance performance, also called My Motherā€™s Kitchen, by Mocean Dance and two video projects curated by Peter Dykhuis, director of the Dalhousie Art Gallery.



ā€œWe were all cooking together, so to speak, like a great party where youā€™re sharing ideas,ā€ says Dr. Bonnemaison.

My Motherā€™s Kitchen runs through Sunday, May 18 in the exhibition hall of Sexton Campus' Medjuck Building (5410 Spring Garden Road). It is open daily from 10-7, except on Sunday where it will be open 10-5.