Wendy Foster Explained

Wendy Cheesman Foster
Nationality:British
Birth Name:Wendy Ann Cheesman
Birth Date:1937
Death Date:15 January 1989 (aged 51)[1] [2]
Spouse:Norman Foster
(m. 1964)
Children:4[3]
Alma Mater:Yale School of Architecture
Practice:Team 4 (1963–67)
Foster Associates (1967–1989)
Significant Buildings:Creek Vean (Team 4), Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Willis Faber and Dumas building, HSBC Building in Hong Kong (Foster Associates)

Wendy Ann Foster (Cheesman; 1937 – 15 January 1989)[4] [2] was a British architect and co-founder of Team 4 and Foster Associates.

Career

Team 4 was an architectural firm, established in 1963 by architecture graduates Su Rogers (née Brumwell), Wendy Cheesman, Norman Foster and Richard Rogers.[5] The firm originally included Wendy Cheesman's sister, Georgie Wolton, who, as the only qualified architect of the group, allowed the practice to function. Georgie Cheesman left after only a few months, leaving the remaining members to try to pass their professional exams while continuing to practice.[5]

The notable buildings that she worked on while at Team 4, includes the first ever house to win a RIBA award - Creek Vean house, Feock, Cornwall, England (1966), Reliance Controls factory, Swindon (1967), Jaffe House (also known as Skybreak House), which was Humphrey Spender's house, Maldon, Essex (1965-1966) and Wates Housing, Coulsdon, Surrey (1965), all in England.[6]

By June 1967, Foster and Rogers, had both decided to dissolve the firm.[7] [8] The Rogerses (Richard and Su) established Richard and Su Rogers Architects and the Fosters (Norman Foster and Wendy Foster, née Cheesman)[9] established Foster Associates.[9] The notable buildings that Wendy Foster was involved in include Sainsbury Centre for Visual Arts, Willis Faber and Dumas building, and the HSBC Building in Hong Kong.

Influence

A new age of architecture, rooted in British Modernism, emerged in the late 1960s. Heavily influenced by new-age engineering practices, this high-tech style of architecture aimed to accentuate the building’s construction.[10] This transformational era in the field of architecture was dominated by male designers, Norman Foster among them. However, what many fail to realize is the number of female architects who not only influenced, but helped the movement thrive.[11] Wendy Foster, as a member of Team 4, aided in the design of the Reliance Controls factory–a manufacturing site for precision electronic tools–which became one of the first high-tech buildings in the United Kingdom. Her contributions to the movement were essential to its rise and the lasting fame of her and her partners’ firm.[12]

Private life

Wendy Cheesman married Norman Foster in 1964.[13] [9] She died of cancer in 1989, aged 51, when she was still a partner/director at Foster Associates.[3] [2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Norman Foster: Man of steel. The Independent. 8 September 2006. 2017-09-10.
  2. Web site: Foster Associates Ltd: Directors Report and Financial Statements for the year ended 30 April 1989. Companies House. 2017-09-10.
  3. Web site: Foster's brew. https://web.archive.org/web/20160226190536/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/4716630/Fosters-brew.html. dead. February 26, 2016. 10 September 2017. Telegraph Media Group.
  4. Web site: Index entry. 10 September 2017. FreeBMD. ONS.
  5. Ian Lambot (Ed.), "Norman Foster: Buildings and Projects Volume 1 1964-1973", Watermark Publications (1991), . Chapter 1 "Team 4" by Sir Richard Rogers, pp. 14-15
  6. Book: Hall, Jane (Writer on architecture). Breaking ground : architecture by women. 16 October 2019. 978-0-7148-7927-7. London. 69. 1099690151.
  7. Web site: El talento es importante, pero lo es más la constancia y el esfuerzo. Gonzalo Carazo. 9 December 2012. 2017-09-06.
  8. Web site: Richard Rogers, Architect (1933-), From the House to the City. Design Museum. 2009-10-04.
  9. Web site: The Guardian Profile: Sir Norman Foster: The master builder. The Guardian. 2 January 1999. 2017-09-10.
  10. Web site: High Tech in Architecture . RIBA Architecture . Royal Institute of British Architecture . 5 March 2024.
  11. Web site: Slessor . Catherine . High-tech was a supreme toys-for-the-boys moment . Dezeen . Dezeen Magazine . 5 March 2024.
  12. Web site: Ravenscroft . Tom . Reliance Controls factory by Team 4 was a 'democratic pavilion' . Dezeen . Dezeen Magazine . 5 March 2024.
  13. Web site: Reaching for the sky. 10 September 2017. The Independent. 5 October 1996 .