White and Fitted:

White and Fitted:
Perpetuating Modernisms
Kathleen Connellan

“Freedom is not a white surface. . . .”1

introduzione
White is everywhere and nowhere because of its ubiquitous
association with space and light and its non-color status. Domestic
design and particularly its wet areas are confined to white in
modernist design; those whites are accompanied by straight lines
and snugly rationalized fittings. Modernism as white and fitted
is something that Mark Wigley addresses comprehensively in his
book, White Walls: Designer Dresses.2 This article probes further the
connections between white, modernism, and rationalism in design,
placing an emphasis upon power relations in a designed society.
Consequently, ”white” in this article is philosophically related to
social privilege, and “fitted” not only means immovable furnishings
but also a lack of flexibility in society and living. These issues are
teased out against the background of an apparent return to color and
flexibility in a postmodern era, when there has been a move away
from totalitarianism toward inclusivity in society. Therefore, IL
thrust of this article is not just about color and design in the décor/
decorative sense but also about how personal politics, subjectivities,
and design are connected.

Michel Foucault’s lectures at the Collège de France inspire a
political reading of white and fitted design. This article is particularly
concerned with modernism in the form of a power structure that
never really went away, and with how this modernism affected and
perhaps still affects the “ordinary” person in the sense that Michel
de Certeau writes about the ordinary man: “To the ordinary man.
To a common hero, an ubiquitous character, walking in countless
thousands of streets.”3 For this article, ordinariness is located in
the home and specifically in the many unremarkable kitchens in
stretches of suburbia. De Certeau’s thinking on the everyday and
the habitual is used in this article to complement/support Foucault’s
ideas on capillaries of power.4 So there are at least two basic positions
within “white and fitted”; crudely, this is the position person/
user/consumer/individual, and the position of the design decision
maker/producer/retailer/supplier. In a more complex breakdown,
these positions are held by people within mechanisms and systems
of power operations.

Consequently, the personal kitchen appliance and furniture or
fittings that accompany the appliance(S) offer an “interior” view, E
© 2010 Istituto di Tecnologia del Massachussetts
Design Issues: Volume 26, Numero 3 Estate 2010

51

1 Michel Foucault, The Birth of Biopolitics:
Lectures at the Collège de France 1978–
1979 (New York: Palgrave Macmillan,
2008), 63.

2 Mark Wigley, White Walls, Designer
Dresses: The Fashioning of Modern
Architecture (Cambridge, MA: CON Premere,
1995).

3 Michel de Certeau, The Practice of

Everyday Life (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1984), v.

4 Michel Foucault, Society Must Be

Defended: Lectures at the Collège de
France 1975–1976 (London: Penguin,
2004), 27.

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These surveys were conducted by the
author and final year industrial design
students at the then School of Built
Environment and Design, Cape Technikon.

Tavolo 1: Design and Use of Color in
Appliances and Cupboards in the Kitchen

the social, political, and economic reality of the time that contributes
to their production offers an “exterior” view. Both views are problem-
atized in terms of arriving at some answers as to whether the people
discussed in the case study and other examples reflect a politics of
“white and fitted.” In other words, this article hypothesizes that
the designed or manufactured spaces, appliances, and fittings that
continue to have modernist standardized simplicity are indicative of
a pervasive conservativism in society and a manifestation of power
relations in the form of neutral design. The South African case study
is used as a point of departure for a broader discussion of design and
social theory in a global and late postmodern context.

The Case Study
Two separate but connected surveys (consumer and retail) on home
appliances and furniture were conducted in Cape Town, South Africa
In 2000.5 Primo, the consumer survey respondents represent a relatively
broad social spectrum: 118 consumers from a non-probability sample
were randomly interviewed in shopping centers containing domestic
appliance stores in areas spread across greater Cape Town. None of
IL 118 were tourists. The Cape Flats area was included in the survey,
which represents 35 percent of the responses; this area is a sprawling
expanse of suburbs, as well as informal settlements that incorporate
a previously “non-white” segregated residential area. The average
age of respondents was late thirties, and the gender balance was
almost 50/50. The interviews were conducted using a random, “on
the spot” method in the centers. Secondo, the retail survey used a
systematic sample of managers of appliance/furniture retail outlets,
and this survey took place in 18 stores across Cape Town and its
outlying districts.

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The consumer survey reveals that the majority of the kitchen
walls were painted white, E 94.5 percent of the 118 respondents
regarded electrical domestic appliances (white goods) as essential.
With this in mind, Tavolo 1 reveals additional information about how
the interiors were configured and colored.

The retail survey data reveals that all the participating stores
sell many more standardized and modular units than loose furniture
items for the kitchen and dining area. It may be an expected result,
but it is nonetheless interesting that both surveys show a continued
affinity for fitted kitchen spaces. The large country kitchen or even
the small kitchen with a movable table in the centre that serves as
eating, working, and preparation space is replaced by countertops
and islands. Respondents in the consumer survey combined their
purchase of d.i.y. kitchen units with the purchase of second-hand or
inexpensive new modular units. These are the decisions of people
who did not hire interior designers or otherwise plan kitchen
makeovers. They may have gotten their ideas from glossy magazines
or home improvement television programs, but the reality is that
of make-do. Despite this, 44 percent of all kitchen cupboards in the
consumer survey are both white and fitted.

Modernisms Past and Present
White and fitted might just be the cheap, obvious, and workable
option. It was then and it is now. But this article suggests that there
is something more to it. White rationalized interior designs became
entrenched in a western iteration of modernism; but the existence of
different types of modernisms across the globe is still not completely
resolved.6 My own fascination with the appliance revolution, white
goods and white people, prompted the question (in an earlier
study) of whether white goods had brought about the same kind
of modernism in apartheid South Africa as that which took place
in the trans-Atlantic west at the height of post-war reconstruction.
Social conditions were different in South Africa, given that there
was inevitably “a black maid” for every “white madam,” and
therefore white goods were not incorporated into the white home
at the same rate as in the developed West.7 Jacklyn Cock’s Maids and
Madams: a study of the politics of exploitation, a brave piece of resistance
research conducted in the late 1970s, uncovered and published
the pre-modern domestic regimes in apartheid South Africa that
were part of both a slave and a colonial era.8 Consequently, there
were different but simultaneous social time zones in the kitchens
of apartheid South Africa. Cock wrote that African maids were not
regarded as adults even if they were grandmothers: “The child
analogy involves a fundamental denial of equality and is often a
component of racist, sexist and classist ideologies.”9 These divisive
ideologies manifested in various ways; one was to curtail the
movements of the African maids.10

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53

6

In relation to the idea of “other”
modernisms, see particularly: Tabish
Kahir, ”Modernism and Modernity:
The Patented Fragments,” Third Text
55 (Estate 2001): 3–13; Geeta Kapur,
“Globalisation and Culture” Third Text
39 (Estate 1997): 21–38; Clifford
Geertz, After the Fact: Two Countries,
Four Decades, One Anthropologist
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press,) 1995; Stuart Hall, “Whose
Heritage? Un-settling ’the Heritage,
Re-imagining the Post-nation,” Third Text
49 (Inverno 1999/2000): 3–13; Sabine
Marshall, “The Integration Of Art and
Architecture And Its Relevance in the
New South Africa.” de Arte 59 (1999):
3–15; Wendy Kaplan, (ed.) Designing
Modernity: The Arts of Reform and
Persuasion 1885–1945: Selections from
the Wolfsonian (London: Thames and
Hudson, 1995); and Duanfang Lu, ”Third
World Modernism: Utopia, Modernity,
and the People’s Commune in China,"
Journal of Architectural Education (2007):
40–48.
“White Skins, White Surfaces: IL
Politics of Domesticity in South African
Homes from 1920–1950” in Taking Up the
Challenge: Critical Race and Whiteness
Studies in a Postcolonising Nation,
ed. Damien Riggs (Adelaide: Crawford
House, 2007): 248–259.
Jacklyn Cock, Maids and Madams: UN
Study in the Politics of Exploitation
(Johannesburg: Ravan, 1980): 123.
Jacklyn Cock, “Domestic Service and
Education for Domesticity” in Women
and Gender in Southern Africa to 1945,
edited by Cherryl Walker (Cape Town:
David Phillip), 82. Eleanor Preston-Whyte,
“’Invisible Workers’: Domestic Service
and the Informal Economy” in South
Africa’s Informal Economy, edited by
Christian Myles Rogerson and Eleanor
Preston-Whyte (Cape Town: Oxford
Stampa universitaria, 1991), 34–53.
10 Cock, Maids and Madams,110.

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The physical boundaries of control echoed the imposition
of an order that extended to a pervasive social surveillance. Robert
Thornton writes that Apartheid was an example of “rampant
modernism.” He points out that Apartheid was “a special form of
modernism and modernization” and stresses the sheer might and
effectiveness of its bureaucratic administration.11 This architectonic
planning of modernism, which dealt with the calculated order of
the grid, was taken up selectively in different parts of the globe and
was most welcome in places ruled with repressive ideologies, come
as Apartheid, Fascism, Nazism, and Communism. ”In this respect,
the Chinese people’s commune movement can be looked at as a
concrete manifestation of high modernist vision.”12 However, IL
freedom and experimentation often associated with the modern
world was and is not welcome in such regimes of power. Therefore,
modernization was fractured in places where the divide between
rich and poor was more extreme, and this situation was usually
outside of the nominal “West.” This meant that modernism was a
drawn-out process, making itself felt in different places in different
stages. The case study used in this article arises two decades after
Cock’s research and 50 years after the height of modernism in the
developed West.13

Today, flat pack kitchens, and similar d.i.y. assemblages in
large retail furniture warehouses and stores like IKEA are white,
modular, standardized units. There has been the trend to include
stainless steel in appliances and finishes, but the background canvas
that is presented to consumers remains predominantly white, E
the rule is that of efficiency in both spatial and financial economy.
Economy means rationing, keeping tally, ordering, conserving,
and spending sparingly. The economic use of space is a spatial
arrangement that makes maximum use of what is available. Economy
is not about excess; it is about a balanced budget. Consequently,
reading space as an accountant might, it is easier to have straight
lines and simple digits than complex ones. Frederick Winslow Taylor
worked this all out more than a century ago; rationalization and
standardization became the raison d’être of modernism.14

Economy is a term that originated in domestic management,
and Foucault throws more light on its meaning when it is translated
across personal and political politics. In the Foucauldian sense,
economy and the management of resources is one of the many
mechanisms of power. Foucault suggests that power can be commod-
itized when it “is regarded as a right which can be possessed in
the way one possesses a commodity. . . .”15 The economic rationale
of modernism encouraged people to think, act, and live efficiently
in order to become individually empowered and therefore to be
“worth” more.

The binaries (per esempio., straight and curved; white and colored;
flexible and fixed) that upheld the totalizing narrative of modernism
have lingered, despite beliefs that postmodernism had dismantled

11 Robert Thornton, “The Potential of
Boundaries in South Africa: Steps
Towards a Theory of the Social Edge” in
Richard Werbner and Terence Ranger,
Postcolonial Identities in Africa (London:
Zed, 1996), 137–138.

12 Lu, Third World Modernism, 47.
13 Rebekah Lee, “Hearth and Home in
Cape Town: African Women, Energy
Resourcing, and Consumption in an
Urban Environment,” Journal of Women’s
History 18:4 (2006): 55–78.
14 Frederick Winslow Taylor’s early

twentieth-century experiments in time
and motion studies provided much of
the rationale for “efficiency” in the
workplace, and his 1911 pubblicazione,
The Early Sociology of Management
and Organizations (New York: Harper
Brothers), influenced production and
management in the capitalist economy.

15 Michel Foucault, Society Must Be

Defended: Lectures at the Collège de
France 1975–1976 (London: Penguin,
2003), 13.

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and democratized the structure. Foucault writes that “There
is no such thing as a neutral subject. . . . A binary structure runs
through society.”16 And Michael Dutton in a recent presentation at
a conference celebrating “Foucault: 25 years on,” said “the binary
never ever disappears . . . logics are held in place by the notion of a
cure.”17 This “notion of a cure” can be applied to modernism, Quale
in the name of progress attempted to solve the crises of expansion
with systems of control.18 Modular furnishings, smooth straight
finishes, and labor-saving domestic appliances remain a factor
in a late postmodern context across the globe. The rise of a new
modernism or a neo-modernist conservatism (even if these are not
necessarily the names attributed) is apparent in both design and
political thought, and it is this particular perpetuation of modernism
that prompted this article.19

Normativity and Identities in Design
“White and fitted” presumes a conformity and an anonymity
associated with modernist standardization and rationalization in
progetto. This type of design brought about a sameness that became
the norm and consequently instituted a system whereby identities
were built on neutrality. That neutrality, I argue, is not neutral at all
but what Foucault might call a “planned spatial distribution.”20 The
considered modularization of space and form combined with the
planned limitation of the interior palette made it easier for the mass
production of an identity in kitchens of suburbia. In other words,
rationalized spaces encourage rationalization of behavior and the
neutralization of identity.

Disciplinary normalization consists first of all in positing
a model, an optimal model that is constructed in terms of
a certain result, and the operation of disciplinary normal-
ization consists in trying to get people, movements, E
actions to conform to this model, the normal being precisely
that which can conform to this norm.21

Adopting and adapting Foucault’s point, the normativity encouraged
by modernism is entrenched and has not been easily erased by the
advent of postmodern philosophy (or design and architecture). In
terms of the consumer survey referred to in the case study, there
was a flatness to the answers; I had hoped for more color and
expression—the kind that is visible on the streets and in the cafes of
post-apartheid Cape Town. The blandness of cream beige surfaces
could represent apathy or oblivion to changing times, or a sad
backdrop to the ongoing struggle to make ends meet, but it might
also be that the neutrality of modernism was so pervasive that it
cast a pall across attempts to be different and inculcated a conser-
vative pallor. E, perhaps there was something in the regularity
and predictability of a white and fitted space that offered feelings of
both security and anonymity simultaneously.

Design Issues: Volume 26, Numero 3 Estate 2010

55

16 Foucault, Society Must Be Defended, 51
17 Michael Dutton, “911 and the Afterlives
of Colonial Governmentality,” keynote
address, Foucault: 25 Years On. Centre
for Post-Colonial and Globalisation
Studi, University of South Australia,
Giugno 25, 2009. Dutton was speaking of
Colonialism and post-Colonialism, E
when I asked him how modernism fit into
his argument about the reassertion of
the binary, he said that the binary is the
political reality and it cannot be ignored.
Colonialism predates modernism, and I
was hoping that Dutton would position
modernism for me in the context of
his talk. He admitted to a slide but
emphasized that colonial governmentality
has become the working norm of all
forms of power.

18 Theodore Adorno grappled with the

”dual” problem of progress in much of
il suo lavoro, questioning why “progress” did
not bring about “progress” and asserting
that progress could only really ever work
if it benefitted humanity. It is this crisis
of modernity that troubled Adorno who,
when considering how and why freedom
can easily turn into domination, reasoned
that “Justice is subsumed in law.” See
Adorno, ”The Concept of Enlightenment”
in Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno,
Dialectic of Enlightenment (London: Allen
Lane, 1973), 16.
David Ley, “Styles of the Times: Liberal
and Neo-Conservative Landscapes in
Inner Vancouver, 1968–1986,” Journal of
Historical Geography 13:1 (1987): 40–56.
Steven Heller and Ann Fink, Less Is More:
The New Simplicity in Graphic Design
(Cincinnati: North Light Books, 1999).
Michel Foucault, Sicurezza, Territory,
Population: Lectures at the Collège de
France, 1977–78, translated by Graham
Burchell (Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave
Macmillan, 2007), 56.
Ibid., 57.

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20

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Kitchen surfaces are hard and rigid. In addition to the
functional necessity of durable stable surfaces, this is also a
consequence of mass manufactured materials, such as laminates,
metals, and baked on enamel, as well as a number of different
composites. These materials are also cold. In modernism the warmth
of the human element is always already absent.22 And, in the contem-
porary advertised interior, white is a particularly shiny and gleaming
type of whiteness, one that creates a haze and conceals as much as
it reveals.23 The person in this scenario is depersonalized into an
unreal construction of “sophisticated” clean linearity, she or he is the
model in the photographed white kitchen interior in the ubiquitous
home-style magazine, not the tired woman or man at home after
work trying to prepare a meal for the family. The aesthetic interiors
are devoid of messy functionality. To reclaim the subjectivities of
the users will mean acknowledging both the ordinariness and the
uniqueness of individual people who feel, eat, sleep, and work.
“Being is measured by doing” is de Certeau’s take on the loss of
identities as a result of the normalizing “capitalist and conquering
society.”24 For Foucault the problem of lost subjectivity can be solved
by taking time to “care for oneself” so that the extraneous world does
not impinge on subjectivity in a negative or destructive manner.25

Whether the ordinary person can choose not be conscripted
into normation (white and fitted) is partly what this paper questions.
The tension between dominant and “subjugated” knowledge is not
entirely predictable.26 The push and pull between conformity to
the white cube or nonconformity to a vibrant exterior of an urban
kaleidoscope (cioè., spazi, smells, noise, and cultural complexity)
is an aspect of contemporary life. There is a tension between what
the market and overriding aspects of ideology serve to people in
the shape of “design” and the personal needs or longings of real
human beings in relationships and families. On the one hand, there
is white in the form of new or maintained whites, and on the other
hand, there are the old, tired whites, such as the white goods in
second hand appliance shops and the smudged, scratched whites
in the homes of suburbia. White, in whatever form or shape, È
ubiquitous and easy to overlook. To what extent is this whiteness,
which is inherited from modernism, an imposed order, an imposed
whiteness? Could it be that, like the ”scriptural economy” of which
de Certeau writes, the script or text becomes society in the end? Is it
the imposed law that writes itself upon society?

. . . the idea of producing a society by a “scriptural” system
has continued to have as its corollary the conviction that
although the public is more or less resistant, it is moulded
by (verbal or iconic) writing, that it becomes similar to what
it receives, and that it is imprinted by and like the text which
is imposed on it. . . . Today the text is society itself. It takes
urbanistic, industrial, commercial, or televised forms.27

Design Issues: Volume 26, Numero 3 Estate 2010

22 Michael K. Hays, Modernism and the

Posthumanist Subject: The Architecture
of Hannes Meyer and Ludwig
Hilbersheimer (Cambridge, MA: MIT
Press, 1992), 4.

23 ”White Spaces,” Australian Critical Race
and Whiteness Studies e journal 2:1
(2006).

24 Michel de Certeau, The Practice of

Everyday Life (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 1984), 136, 137.
25 Michel Foucault, The Hermeneutics of
the Subject: Lectures at the Collège de
France 1981–1982, edited by Frédéric
Gros, translated by Graham Bruchell
(New York: Picador, 2005), 3.
26 Michel Foucault, Society Must Be

Defended: Lectures at the Collège de
France 1975–1976. (London: Penguin,
2003), 7.

27 de Certeau, La pratica della vita quotidiana,

167.

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In saying this de Certeau does not support the idea that consumers
are passive or that they are not creative. He contests the idea that
the populace is left “grazing on the ration of simulacra the system
distributes to each individual,” but he does emphasize the might
of that system.28 To be creatively different, to avoid being part of a
system (of white and fitted kitchens or other interiors, Per esempio)
may mean that you are in receipt of an education that reaps alterity
and ingenuity. It takes time and energy to defy normative trends,
which could also indicate a privileged status, even if it is the
privilege to have time to be different. The blandness apparent in the
answers to questions in the consumer survey may be indicative of
an imposed economic order. This is an order represented as white
and middleclass in terms of society, and in South Africa, merely
having appliances means that you are middle class, which in the
year 2000 was still mostly white. In a country that had been ruled by
an exclusive white order of government, the possessions that went
with that white order became part of the previously disadvantaged
people’s sense of right in a post-apartheid scenario.

The imposition of an order is something that Foucault spent
most of his life investigating and that de Certeau engages with in
terms of consumerism, saying: ”It is in any case impossible to reduce
the functioning of a society to a dominant type of procedures.”29
The idea of an overriding ideology that dominates and dictates
how people should or should not live is, according to de Certeau, at
variance with the “innumerable other practices that remain ‘minor,
always there but not organizing discourses….”30 Therefore, IL
question needs to be asked: How do the 23 percent of green, orange,
and other colored kitchen cupboards in the case study fit into the
hypothetically dominant color of kitchen interiors? And how do the
people who inhabit these colored spaces live and act? Are they any
different from those who accept or even choose the white and fitted
scenario?31 It is a fact of late capitalist society that people are often no
longer referred to as people but as consumers, market sectors, E
generational categories. This terminology has infiltrated many areas
of communication, and people often become delineated according to
material acquisitions and associated aspirations.

Material acquisitions are acquired in a variety of ways, E
choices often depend on complex relationships between the family
or household. Pierre Bourdieu writes that “educational capital” is an
important distinguishing factor when making purchasing decisions.
Tuttavia, in terms of furniture and home decoration, he says, social
class is usually more important than education.32

The adjectives respondents have chosen to describe an
interior, and the source of their furniture, are more closely
linked to their social origin than to their educational
qualifications….33

Design Issues: Volume 26, Numero 3 Estate 2010

57

Ibid., 166.
Ibid., 49.
Ibid., 48.
Ibid., 45 E 49.

28
29
30
31
32 Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction: A Social

Critique of the Judgement of Taste,
translated by Richard Nice (Cambridge,
MA: Stampa dell'Università di Harvard, 1984), 79.
Ibid., 78.

33

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Bourdieu’s position is that lived experience and learned habits
through class inheritance and the type of education afforded to
it determine the kinds of “taste” decisions people make. Such a
perspective presents one way of reading the idea of “white and
fitted” as possessions worth having.34 In the Bourdieu sense, IL
”social origin” of people in particular economic categories fixes
their purchasing decisions unless they move out of that class
through education. Daniel Miller ’s more recent ethnographic
investigation examined the way in which tenants of flats with fitted
kitchens in North London individualized their spaces and resisted
the standardized installation-style lifestyle handed down to them
or prescribed to them by the blandness of modern design.35 Alison
Clarke notes that immigrants from a wide array of countries in North
London tend to either “perpetuate” or ”reinvent” their material
culture; these are not the same stories as those of architectural or
interior design magazines or (as Clarke notes) the many home
decorating shows on television that set the trends for decorating.36
Glossy advertising and the promotion of furnishings and appliances
present a distorted reality of an idealized social setting. Questo
idealization is not a simple consumerist dream construction, Ma
rather a distorted mirror, a “zerrspiegel,”37 reflecting the avoidance of
complex and different realities and governed by differing purchasing
potential and social status.38

Some marginal living practice(S) resulting from immigration,
refugee, and unsettled diasporic identities are overlooked identities
that have the power to revise and unseat dominant ideologies by a
natural resistance to the institutionalization of normativity.39 This
does not mean that architecture and interior design disciplines are
not sensitive to the unusual and the peripheral—far from it; ma il
mainstream visual communication of most interiors does not do
justice to the many mixtures of humanity and their spaces.

White becomes the (non) color of many spaces, so that the
neutral space does not have the mark of anyone’s individuality.
D.J.B. Young’s survey of real estate agents in London reinforces the
ubiquity of white or cream neutrality:

Evidently there is some widely understood social consensus
about neutrality. It does not mean grey, which is the color
that Western color science would term neutral. Here it
constitutes lightness, a feeling of space and is impersonal,
‘a blank canvas’ is the recurring description agents give
.… Anything that is not neutral, i.e. is colored, is by
implication, a personal idiosyncrasy that other people
cannot relate to. Nonetheless neutrality is culturally
constructed….40

The cultural construction of neutrality is the permeating ideology of
western similitude, but neutral is not the color that one would use
to describe Cape Town in South Africa or, for that matter, any large

Ibid.

34
35 Daniel Miller (ed.), Home Possessions:
Material Culture Behind Closed Doors
(London: Berg, 2001).

36 Alison Clarke, “The Aesthetics of Social

Aspiration” in Ibid., 26.

37 Roland Marchand, Advertising the
American Dream: Making Way for
Modernity 1920–1940 (Berkeley:
University of California, 1985), xvi.
38 See also Colin Campbell, The Romantic
Ethic of Modern Consumption (Oxford:
Blackwood, 1989); “Consumption and the
Rhetorics of Need and Want,” Journal
of Design History 11:3 (1998): 236; E
Daniel Miller, Material Culture and Mass
Consumption (Oxford: Blackwell, 1987).

39 Alison Clarke (2001, P. 29) notes this

point with particular reference to ethnic
immigrants who live in state-designed,
standardized housing; but see also
Matthew Barac, “Transit Spaces:
Thinking Urban Change in South Africa”
in Home Cultures 4:2 (2007). Theodore
Adorno, ”Refuge for the Homeless,"
in Minima Moralia: Reflections from
Damaged Life (London: New Left, 1974),
38–40; Sebastian Ureta, “Domesticating
Homes: Material Transformation and
Decoration among Low-Income Families
in Santiago, Chile,” Home Cultures 4:3
(2007): 311–336.

40 D.J.B. Young, “The Material Value of

Colour: The Estate Agent’s Tale,” Home
Cultures 1:1 (2004): 9.

58

Design Issues: Volume 26, Numero 3 Estate 2010

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city with a significant multi-cultural component—when the focus
is on the details. That detailed visual culture includes the people,
bright lights, signs, banners, markets, and hawkers, all animating
the environment with energy and change. When and if this detail
is merged into the superstructure, sameness is the residue. It is a
case of people and power; the populace and especially the crowd
always pose a threat to systems of control and governments.41 The
contradictions between the clean, neutral surfaces of modernisms
(old and new) and the vibrancy of color conflate with the dialectic
in power relations and governmentality. In this way white and its
equivalents in the post-industrial world compete with voices of
constituted colors. Stephen Eskilson traces the entry of color into
consumption, describing the 1920s and 1930s environment as if it
were a symphony and theatre of color, both day and night. He writes
that color became the dominant code for retail in a “rainbow arsenal
of products.”42 This era was a period of high modernism, with the
vitality of synthesized color relegated to retail, shopping, E
consuming. While the stories and reality of color in visual culture
cannot be ignored, not then and not now, this article argues that there
is also a resistance to the varieties of color that is easier to overlook.
Whites in their apparent neutrality can permeate backgrounds
without their advancement’s being particularly noticeable. It is this
seemingly stealthy movement of whites and neutrals across culture
and thinking that is of particular interest to me.

David Batchelor, in his book Chromophobia, begins his first
chapter entitled “Whitescapes” with a personal visit to the home
of a renowned Anglo-American art collector. Batchelor notes the
appearance of empty whiteness:

. . . seamless, continuous, empty, uninterrupted. Or rather:
uninterruptable. There is a difference. Uninterrupted might
mean overlooked, passed by, inconspicuous, insignificant.
Uninterruptable passes by you, renders you inconspicuous
and insignificant. The uninterruptable, endless emptiness
of this house was impressive, elegant and glamorous in a
spare and reductive kind of way, but it was also assertive,
emphatic and ostentatious. This was assertive silence,
emphatic blankness, the kind of ostentatious emptiness
that only the very wealthy and the utterly sophisticated
can afford. It was a strategic emptiness, but it was also
accusatory.43

One may ask, Poi, to what extent the idea of a neutral, smooth,
uncluttered, monochromatic and built-in kitchen is evidence of an
identity that differs from the normative institution of modernism (IL
bland bank building; the grid-formed office block of an insurance
company; the modular mass housing estates)? Is not such an identity
still the tenacious modernist and Taylorist gauge of time and motion?
Easy to clean and saves time? Tuttavia, white, as Wigley tells us, È

Design Issues: Volume 26, Numero 3 Estate 2010

59

41 James M. Mayo, “Propaganda with

progetto: Environmental Dramaturgy in the
Political Rally,” Journal of Architectural
Education 32:2 (1978).
42 Stephen Eskilson, “Color and

Consumption,"Problemi di progettazione 118:2
(2002): 27.

43 David Batchelor, Chromophobia (London:

Reaktion, 2000): 9, 10.

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only as clean as its surface layer, one that is thin and impermanent.44
This point is the subject of another paper45 on the relationship
between washing and whiteness, but it can suffice to say here that
the continued and increasing pressures of work and life are not so
easily washed or boxed away.

Conclusione
Post-apartheid society and the fêted rainbow nation have been
generally romanticized as a colorful ideal of multi-lingual ethnicities
making efforts to share cultures and bury hatchets. But that is an
exterior, trendy street view and constitutes a quintessential postmod-
ernism, one that is vibrant and edgy. Certainly the “post” in this
sense is nonconformist—it does not fit to size; it is a “post” that
constantly plays with its rainbow reflections. Against the backdrop
of such color, pristine white kitchens photographed in glassed
interiors are the marketing face of a design that capitalizes on the
contrast such romantic color offers to the neo-modernist visage of
whiteness. Tuttavia, the reality is more mundane and filled with
the dulled whites of overuse. Old whites are a continuation of a
faded modernism that failed to be redeemed by the promise of a
post future. In this sense the ordinary person is a tired individual.
Late capitalist production continues to serve up the leftovers of an
unrevised type of modernism because it is the easier and cheaper
option for consumers.

At certain times in their lives and in certain places of their
domicile, people construct a type of identity according to their
circumstances. Such an identity results from an external collective
association and does not necessarily include the formulation of
subjectivities that are internal and personal. Identity (as in design
identity) incorporates color, form, and shape and is directly aligned
with the material world. To be white and fitted, Poi, is an identity
that suits certain strata of society that, for economic, social, or other
reasons, is unable or unwilling to move out of that mold for a certain
period of time. The mold or structure offers a safety net, a secure
status that is part and parcel of institutionalized normativity. Such
is the strength of uniform design and color distribution; a leveling
out and neutralizing of form and color is precisely the ideology of
whiteness as an institution.

People, possessions, and power are calibrated upon the
surface structure of whiteness. White in domestic design in this
way is a type of imposed order that emanates from the dominant
text of a western capitalist society. To succumb to the prescription
of being white and fitted as a human being is less easy to describe
than to be white and fitted as an interior, and it is the interiors as an
extension of the human being with which this article has concerned
itself. In so doing, the identity of the person and the kitchen area
of their home conflate interior architectural space with subjec-
attività (interior psychological space). To be white and fitted as an

Design Issues: Volume 26, Numero 3 Estate 2010

44 Mark Wigley, White Walls, Designer

Dresses, xviii.

45 “Washing White” in The Racial Politics of

Bodies, Nations and Knowledges, edited

by Barbara Baird and Damien Riggs

(Cambridge: Cambridge Scholars Press,

2009).

60

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individual person and not a collective (per esempio., an institution, as stated
above), could indicate either a denied and confused identity or a
latent search for subjectivity. The ordinary person living, working,
cooking, and cleaning in a white and fitted space is not necessarily
there out of choice in a world so filled with choices. Perhaps then, IL
questions surrounding “white and fitted, perpetuating modernisms,"
constitute the ironies and tensions that are part of democracy and
freedom—something much deeper than the color and form.

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Design Issues: Volume 26, Numero 3 Estate 2010

61White and Fitted: Immagine

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