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The Building Museum’s current exhibit, Drawing Toward Home, begins with the spidery lines of a Samuel McIntire plan of a Federal style house to be built in Salem, Massachusetts in the late 1700s. The rooms aren’t labeled, but simply marked with their measurements. The single sheet is a design, a contract, and a builder’s directive.

Very quickly, the exhibit’s drawings of houses turn into drawings of home. Along with color and detail, they add emotion.

“The architect must keep his client’s enthusiasm alive and active by sending or submitting bright, jaunty little perspective sketches of his contemplate work,” wrote Benjamin Linfoot in Architectural Picture Making (1884).

The drawings are partially the ploy of an architect to keep his client engaged and committed, but also a reflection of what we mean when we say home.

A colorful child-like drawing featuring a house with an orange body and red roof, next to a green tree. A stick figure stands nearby, smiling. The sun shines in the top right corner with a blue cloud above.

It should be the place where the sun shines, flowers grow, and we hold hands.

 

Today we interpret such nostalgia two ways. Massive neo-Victorians recall one idealized era of family, but with room for the SUV, microwave, and home theater.

A large yellow house with white trim features a wide front porch and multiple windows. The front yard has a path leading to the entrance, and patches of snow are visible on the ground, with some trees in the background.

Wouldn’t it be easier to shrink the kids?

Cool modern houses recall another, equally idealized time, when DDT and cigarettes were good for you.

A modern house with large glass windows and unique angular design, set on a sloping hillside surrounded by tall bare trees. Snow patches are visible on the ground, indicating a late winter or early spring setting.

Honey, I’ve landed.

But life, as well as architectural drawings, are infinitely more complex these days. Where do you want to live—cool or cozy? And will you be happy there?