Abstract

In the 1850s, a French magician and inventor named Jean Eugene Robert-Houdin filled his home with electrical and mechanical gadgets including a system of centrally-controlled alarm clocks to wake servants, an automatic horse-feeder and a complex system of bells to detect visitors. We examine how this early intrusion of machinery into the domestic realm drew on the craft of conjuring performance and apparatus design. Through an analysis of Robert-Houdin's house, we show how the techniques of magic, specifically of simulation and dissimulation, provide a ready-made language in which to consider the accommodation of machines within architectural design. This analysis is then reflected forward to a discussion of two later cases of overtly mechanised houses within the established canon of modern architecture: Le Corbusier's Appartement Charles de Beistegui completed in 1931, and Alison and Peter Smithson's House of the Future or ‘appliance house’ displayed in 1956. Through the language of magic, these cases are discussed in terms of alternative readings of Le Corbusier's modernist mantra of the house as a machine for living.

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