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ANNMARIE ADAMS

McGill University

Peter Collins
A Study in Parallax

This article illustrates how architectural educator and historian Peter Collinss collection of 35-mm
slides and his personal papers are useful windows on his work, life, and even his death. Parallax
allowed Collins to constantly reinvent himself and his work, just as his books suggested that it
had provided twentieth-century architects with a revolutionary way of making space.

Architectural historian Peter Collins (19201981) is


best known as the author of three significant texts
in the postwar period, Concrete (1959), Changing
Ideals in Modern Architecture 17501950 (1965),
and Architectural Judgment (1971). Thanks to its
republication by McGill-Queens University Press in
1998, with a foreword by Kenneth Frampton, his
magnum opus Changing Ideals in Modern Architecture is once again widely read as a major text on
Modernism.1 It was in this book that Collins
asserted his own notion of parallax as an alternative
to other popular, style-based histories, suggesting
that Modern architecture was an extension or
reversal of traditional methods of exploiting parallax. This bold assertion was intended to counter
publications such as Sigfried Giedions popular
book, Space, Time and Architecture.
To Collins, parallax was an architectural condition experienced directly by a visitor to a building,
whereby an apparent displacement of objects
occurs when the point of observation changes, an
experience he liked to illustrate with interior photographs.2 In order for the change of perspective to
occur through this shift in position, Collins insisted
on an initial or originating position. This baseline
position functioned as a sort of precedent for
Collins. Just as in his own life he drew from a
sense of tradition and continuity (both real and
imagined) to make sense of his life and work
through a series of dislocations, so too in his theory
of parallax the visitor to a building must have
first occupied a clear position in order to understand the spatial change that has occurred.

This article engages Collinss collection of


35-mm slides and his personal papers to explore the
relationship of parallax to his life, teaching, writing,
and even his death.3 Numerous aspects of his personal life functioned in a dynamically shifting mode,
just like the buildings he claimed were based on
parallax: his social class and politics, his profession,
the loss of his wife, and his suicide in 1981. Each of
these purposeful displacements offered Collins
a fresh, unencumbered point of observation from
which to see and interpret another way, just as
a changed observational position inside a building
could provide a new line of sight. Although Collins
spent most of his career in Canada, his scholarship
was shaped by the scholarly and architectural traditions of France and his frequent forays into American
universities. He savored his prospect from the City of
Montreal, the Province of Quebec, and Canada, the
nation, of the 1960s and 1970s. It was from these
particular positions that his deep interests in precedent, authority, hierarchy, and heraldry were not
only tolerated but also nourished; and his position
vis-a`-vis the mainstream could change in parallax.
In terms of his publications, Collinss search for
unfolding perspectives on Modernism is most evident in the way he approached his book-length
projects. In March 1961, he wrote to J.M. Richards,
the editor of Architectural Review, offering to write
an article on the concept of space-time as used by
Giedion and others.4 In this letter, Collins told
Richards that he planned to conclude the article by
suggesting his own theory of parallax as a more
effective explanation than Giedions Modern

Journal of Architectural Education,


pp. 2231 2005 ACSA

architectural space. Richards took Collins up on his


offer to write the article. It appeared in Architectural
Review in December 1962 and subsequently became
Chapter 24, New Concepts of Space, in Changing
Ideals in Modern Architecture.5 The essay was classic
PC, as he was affectionately known to his
colleagues: bold in its assertions, focused in its
argument, and unforgettable in its elocution. Here he
asserted, for the first time, that twentieth-century
architecture was essentially an extension and reversal
of traditional methods of exploiting parallax.
During his lectures at McGills School of
Architecture in Montreal, where he taught from
1956 until his death in 1981, Collins used a series of
numbered slides (Figures 1 and 2) of the Pantheon
in Paris to illustrate traditional, pre-Modern parallax. As the photographers point of observation
changes, the apparent relationship of columns
changes, legible in these images through the
appearance of the tiny, white-shoed figure and the
increased visibility of the tapestry. Surprisingly,
Collins used no illustrations in the Architectural
Review version of the article and used only a few
photographs, disconnected from the text, to explain
the idea in the book.6
Collins argued in Changing Ideals in Modern
Architecture that twentieth-century architects,
especially Le Corbusier, Walter Gropius, Mies van
der Rohe, Frank Lloyd Wright, Auguste Perret, and
Louis Kahn, extended or reversed this earlier version
of parallax.7 Wrights Unity Temple was, in Collinss
opinion, an illustration of how cantilevered
balconies had extended the traditional method of

Peter Collins: A Study in Parallax 22

1. Interior of the Pantheon, Paris. Slide library, School of Architecture, McGill University.

2. Interior of the Pantheon, Paris. Slide library, School of Architecture, McGill University.

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ADAMS

parallax. Parallax occurs not only as visitors to Unity


Temple move beside architectural features but also
as they move over or beneath features such as
cantilevered overhangs. In a building based on
extended parallax, that is, building parts slide above
and below users as well as beside them.
Among the illustrations he chose for the book
to show this sideways movement was Kahns Yale
Art Gallery (Figure 3), that Collins noted illustrated
the effects of parallax created by screens. Kahns
use of high towers, on the other hand, which
change their apparent relation as one moves round
the building, seems to be entirely within the
customary use of parallax.8
Collins illustrated the reversal of the traditional
method of exploiting parallax with the work of Le
Corbusier, whose interpenetrating interiors and
exteriors he said were best appreciated in motion.9
In an extended discussion of Giedions space-time,
he notes that the interiors of Modern buildings could
be assessed from outside, while the exteriors
required movement. Giedions remark that

3. Yale Art Gallery, Changing Ideals in Modern Architecture.

4. Peter Collins 1948 thesis project for a seminary, elevations. Slide library, School of Architecture, McGill University.

orated on Le Corbusiers role in the chapter The


Influence of Painting and Sculpture:

Le Corbusiers Villa Savoye was hollowed out


seems crucial to Collinss reversal of parallax; the
building is self-contained from the outside, but
space burrows in rather than spilling out in separate
parts that might be seen in parallax.10
Even with the most familiar buildings, Collinss
idea of reversed parallax is difficult to grasp. In
addition to describing the particular subtractive spatial complexity of Le Corbusiers designs, Collinss use
of the term reversal may have pointed to irrational,
groundless, or unexpected conditions and forms in
the buildings. This categorization is implied by his
quote from John Summersons Heavenly Mansions,
which describes Le Corbusiers work as oppositional,
in particular as Cubist, a sum of destructions, and
the reverse logic of every situation.11 Collins elab-

. . . most of Le Corbusiers basic revolutionary


ideas also imply what Summerson describes as
Alice-in-Wonderland inversions, and which,
despite their elaborate rationalization, are
essentially examples of a logic turned upsidedown. In other words, when compared with
traditional building methods, they constituted
a kind of "anti-architecture." For example,
whereas in traditional architecture, a villa is
situated in a garden, in Le Corbusiers
architecture, the garden is situated in the villa.
Whereas in Classical architecture colonnades are
placed on a base of solid walling, Le Corbusier
places solid walling on top of his columns.12
Unpredictable displacements also marked
Collinss early career trajectory. Born in Leeds in

1920, he developed a passion for French architecture early in his youth.13 Nevertheless, he claimed
throughout his life that he had decided to become
an architect as a nine-year-old when he visited
Canterbury Cathedral. During World War II, Collins
joined the Yorkshire Hussars as a trooper and
served as an intelligence officer. After the war, he
returned to Leeds to complete his architectural
studies. The thesis project (Figure 4) he completed
at Leeds in 1948 for a National Seminarya
complex of undecorated, flat-roofed, high-rise
towers, and a Church linked through a series of
courtyardsshows how his interest in Modern
design was already well established.14 In 1948,
Collins moved to Fribourg, Switzerland, where he
worked in the office of Denis Honegger, a former
student of Perret and one of Perrets most rigorous
followers. He then relocated to Paris, where he
would return frequently, and was employed by
Pierre-Edouard Lambert, whose office was among

Peter Collins: A Study in Parallax 24

the firms working with Perret. It was during this


five-year period that several of the seeds of
Collinss lifelong passions were sown, especially the
architecture of reinforced concrete, the city of Paris,
and the work of Perret, the main subject of
Concrete, the Vision of a New Architecture.15
A fourth passion of the young architect was
Margaret Gardner Taylor of Ottawa. On one trip to
Paris, in 1953, he married the young Canadian.
Responsible for his eventual move to Montreal,
Mrs. Collins became a familiar figure to students at
McGill University, as a constantly reappearing scale
figure in many of the schools 35-mm slides
(Figure 5). In 1955, Collins graduated with his
masters from Manchester University, with a project
that had focused on the life and work of JacquesFranc
xois Blondel (for which he won the 1954 RIBA
Silver Medal). The young couple moved to New
Haven, Connecticut, that same year, where Collins
taught architectural history as a Fulbright scholar at
Yale University, launching his academic career as

a transplanted colonist. By the age of 35, then,


Collins had lived in England, Switzerland, France,
and the United States, in addition to his somewhat
mysterious wartime travels in the Middle East
(probably Egypt) and Italy. He would return to the
United States for two extended periods: in 1964,
to teach at Smith College and in 19671968,
to visit the University of California, Berkeley.
The remainder of Collinss life was spent in
Montreal, where he and Margaret moved in 1956, in
order for him to take up a position at McGill Universitys sixty-year-old School of Architecture, directed
by Modernist John Bland since 1941.16 Bland and
Collins shared a pedagogy based on the Modern
movements teaching of rationalism and functionalism. Their gentlemanly demeanors and previous
experiences in Britain, too, may have provided the
foundation for their lifelong cordial friendship.17
Perhaps equally appealing to the young Collins was
the absolute freedom Director Bland offered faculty
members to teach courses as they pleased.

5. Margaret Collins, Malton Airport. Slide library, School of Architecture, McGill University.

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In addition to secure employment and a likeand open-minded boss, Montreal in this golden
decade of the 1960s offered Collins a number of
tangible benefits. First, Montreal was close to
Margarets family in Ottawa. Second, Collins took
every advantage of the highly charged architectural
scene unfolding in his milieu, as indicated by his
beloved photographs. We know, for example, that he
witnessed the opening of I.M. Peis 600-foot tower,
Place Ville Marie, in September 1962, because he
described the military band that played at the event
in a review for Manchesters The Guardian and
photographed it for the McGill slide library
(Figure 6). A fair sprinkling of inquisitive onlookers
[were] attracted by the music of the military band,
he reported.18 He also reviewed and photographed
Pier Luigi Nervis Place Victoria (Figure 7), under
construction in 1964. It is difficult to imagine Collins,
who always dressed in a proper white shirt, black
suit, and tie for class, on this frenetic construction
site.19 He was definitely there, however, as his
photograph of Place Victoria, like nearly all his slides
of buildings under construction, focuses on the
exposed reinforced concrete frames.20
This backstage perspective on Montreal
Modernism offered a new point of observation for
Collinss evolving interpretation of French rationalism, clearly reflected in his changing ideas about
Changing Ideals in Modern Architecture. The twopage outline he sent to Faber and Faber in 1959 was
for a book completely different from what he
eventually would publish. At this stage, there was
no five-part division, and perhaps more importantly,
no analogies. From the letters and notes which he
left regarding the book, the final structure seems to
have evolved some time between 1959 and April
1963, when he submitted seven chapters of the
book. These were published serially in the magazine
Canadian Architect between May 1963 and March
1964. Some parts, too, like the article in
Architectural Review, appeared in the international
press. There is no mention of any Canadian
building or architect in the book, although he began

6. Marching band, Place Ville Marie, Montreal. Slide library, School of Architecture, McGill University.

writing reviews and articles on Canadian buildings


as early as December 1959.
This parallactic, ever-changing approach to
scholarship continued even after the books
publication. An intriguing, undated note (Figure 8)
that Collins probably made to himself listed the
changes he would have liked to make to Changing
Ideals. There were six numbered points:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

Pevsners factual errors


An expanded discussion of Revolutionary
More material on the influence of painting
Additions to the section on decorative arts
Additions to the mechanical analogy
Rewrite biological analogy

Unnumbered items also appeared on the list,


including the addition of a musical analogy,
material on Nervis attitudes to various structural
types (perhaps inspired by his first-hand knowledge
of Place Victoria), an expanded discussion of

nationalism and Gothic, a section on environmental


harmony, and some people to add to the revised
books acknowledgments. The undated note is
a remarkable document: a one-page review of
Changing Ideals by its author, who was its
toughest critic, and clear evidence that whenever
Collins wrote this note to himself, he had
changed his mind about Changing Ideals. Always
worried that the book would usurp his usefulness
as a lecturer, Collins continuously revised his
courses, which may have led him to new ideas for
the book.21
Evidence of this penchant for revision appears
throughout his papers. His lecture notes, typically
only a page (Figure 9), are layered with changes,
edits, and suggested improvements. Sections of
text are crossed out; arrows indicate a change
of order; sometimes there is even a record of
discussion time for a particular class.
A second form of revisiting past ideas, the
notion of architectural precedent, also recurs

7. Construction site, Place Victoria, Montreal. Slide library, School of


Architecture, McGill University.

throughout Collinss papers, culminating in his third


and final book, Architectural Judgement, in 1971.
His insistence on precedent is the main reason that
the Vernacular was such a ticklish subject for
Collins. Important thing is relation of programme
to solution, he says, difficulty of knowing former
re vernacular. In addition to the lack of a clear
program, the notion of Vernacular was particularly
thorny for Collins, because to him it had no clear
relationship to precedent.
Collinss entire life, indeed, was a search for
precedent and authority via these constantly shifting
perspectives. In 19681969, he stepped out of the
box to see things in a remarkably new way by
attending law school at Yale University. During his

Peter Collins: A Study in Parallax 26

8. Future modifications, notes by Peter Collins. John Bland Canadian Architecture Collection,
McGill University.

sojourn at Berkeley, too, he seems to have delighted


in the close proximity of the architecture and law
departments, Wurster Hall and Boalt Hall, as he frequently photographed the postwar buildings
together. It is telling, too, that Collins chose to leave
Montreal during its finest architectural moment, Expo
67, a showcase of architectural Modernism that
brought many of his subsequent McGill colleagues to
Montreal. Nonetheless, his critique of Montreals
worlds fair as haphazard was equally revealing of his
feelings toward his adopted city, which he described

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9. Lecture notes, Vernacular, Peter Collins. John Bland Canadian Architecture Collection,
McGill University.

in Canadian Architect in 1966 as one of the most


beautiful settings in North America.22
For Collins, as for other immigrants in the
postwar period, Montreals benefits extended far
beyond its aesthetic pleasures. Perhaps, he felt
that he would have no access to the powerful
moneyed classes in England and France, whereas
Canadas largest city offered Collins immediate
entry into the upper echelons of urban society. His
polite British accent, impeccable French (yet disdain
for the Quebec sovereignty movement), love of

good food and precise language, his conservative


wardrobe, and deep intelligence were his calling
cards.23 He lived in a traditional house (Figure 10)
in well-to-do, Anglophone Westmount, and drove
a yellow Mustang, crafting a relatively strange,
nonconforming relationship to both Britain and the
former colony in which he chose to live, teach, and
write. Collins was not the only postwar architectural
historian to react strongly to British class
consciousness. In this regard, he shares much with
Reyner Banham and Colin Rowe, in particular,

whose perspectives on the power of architecture


were decidedly more progressive than Collinss.24
During his twenty-five years at McGills School
of Architecture, Collins never discussed his childhood. No father is listed on his birth certificate, and
no one seems to know anything about his mother,
Ann Collins, who is described as a hospital registration clerk on his birth certificate.25 Did Ann
Collins raise her son? Was this in Leeds, at the
working-class address cited on the birth certificate,26 or in London? Did Collins know the identity
of his father? Was Collinss unremitting search for
precedent and authority in architecture, and his
deep interest in lineage, nourished by a childhood
without these? Perhaps his deep personal interests
in both hierarchy and heraldry are offshoots of his
compelling search for a father figure.27
Collins suffered from insomnia and depression
throughout his adult life. When depressed, his
preference for aristocratic surroundings became
especially evident. For example, he often went to
expensive restaurants and hotels in Montreal.
While on a tour of the Palace of Versailles during
a summer course he taught in France in 1978,
he confided to a student that he would have
liked to live there. He surrounded himself with
symbols of aristocracy; in his office (which also
housed the slide library) was a huge wooden coat
of arms.28 Similarly (and perhaps related to his dislike
for vernacular architecture), Collins disdained the
ordinary. He found particularly distasteful the
penchant of journalists to interview the man on the
street, whose opinions he considered
absolutely meaningless. He had no sympathy for
student participation in university affairs. During the
student protests at McGill in the 1960s, Collins exited
the McConnell Engineering Building
wielding wire cutters, and cut the power to the
activists loudspeakers. Just before his death
in 1981, he apparently responded to nearly every
remark by his colleagues with a three-word
question: on whose authority?29 Born into a social
system based on authority, lineage,

10. Home of Peter and Margaret Collins, Westmount, Quebec. Photograph by Ricardo Vera.

11. Ottawa City Hall, Ottawa. Slide library, School of Architecture, McGill University.

Peter Collins: A Study in Parallax 28

12. Malton airport, Toronto, Slide library, School of Architecture, McGill University.

13. Toronto City Hall. Slide library, School of Architecture, McGill University.

patriarchy, and exclusivity, Collins came to cultivate


these values in his adopted city, Montreal.
Certainly, Collinss deep interest in precedent
had a discernible impact on his critique of
Canadian Modernism.The buildings he admired, such
as Rother Bland Trudeaus Ottawa City Hall
(Figure 11) or Torontos Malton Airport (Figure 12)
by John B. Parkin Associates, constructed as
he was writing Changing Ideals between 1957 and
1965, were ones which both relied on and set
obvious precedents. Because the wise decision
was made to emphasize a parking garage, claimed
Collins in an assessment of three Canadian airports in
the RAIC Journal of 1964, Malton undoubtedly
constitutes a prototype of world-wide significance in
its compositional conception.30 Buildings he did not
admire, like Viljo Rewells Toronto City Hall
(Figure 13) and Wrights Guggenheim Museum,
were unique and thus commanded little sense of
authority and engaged no precedents. He described
the New York museum as about as inhuman as
a boa constrictor and as exotic as the tendrils of
some Brobdingnagian plant, and Collins critiqued
Rewells widely praised masterpiece:
There is no doubt that both the Guggenheim
Museum and the Toronto City Hall will be
regarded by future historians as great works of
art, because art historians tend to see buildings
as abstract sculpture, requiring neither
antecedence nor succession for their
justification. It will be a mark of excellence that
no one has ever designed anything like them
before, and that no one will ever design
anything like them again.31
Regardless of his subject, Collins always found
a way to mention his pet peeves, especially the
myopia of art historians and the devastating impact
of the so-called Form-Givers (Modern architects
who ignore the program and produce arbitrary
sculptural forms, like Paul Rudolph). This was his
real contribution to the interpretation of the

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architecture of his own era. His criticism of the


Toronto City Hall, Sydney Opera House, and the
forms produced by Rudolph et al. addressed the
same problems as Robert Venturi, Denise Scott
Brown, and Steven Izenours Learning from Las
Vegas (1972). These authors, too, condemned
Rudolphs work for being irrelevant, self-important,
and original. Collinss clear identification of this
problem of novelty in postwar Modernism
more than a decade before Learning from
Las Vegas has yet to be recognized.32
Near the end of his life, Collinss parallax became
a one-way system. In the way his personal life
unfolded, there was no doubling back, no reworking
of the parti, and in the end, no final look back. By the
late 1970s, his perspective on Perret was even
ambivalent. During the second and final time he
taught Summer Course Abroad (Rome and Paris) in
1978, he encouraged his students to visit Perrets Le
Havre, but refused to go with them, perhaps recognizing that the project was less successful than he had
previously believed.33 In the fall of 1980, Collinss
world of reason and order was shattered by depression and loneliness, especially following the death of
Margaret by suicide in Montreal while he was in Paris.
With this devastating passing of his life partner and
scale figure, his changing point of observation
apparently lost all discernible references. He took his
own life at home on June 7, 1981.34 His second books
title, in this sense, was an accurate reflection both of
its central argument on parallax and as a biographical
metaphor for Collins the man: Changing Ideals.35
Nearly twenty-five years after his death,
Collinss role as a major figure in the historiography
of Modernism is only beginning to be studied. Special issues of architectural journals (ARQ: Architecture
Quebec and Fifth Column) devoted to his work, the
republication of two of his books and a French
translation of Concrete, and a symposium and related
publication at the Canadian Centre for Architecture in
1999 have nurtured new interest in his prolific career.
Our understanding of this elusive scholar, like his
own work and life, is thus changing in parallax.

Acknowledgments
An earlier version of this paper was presented at
the annual meeting of the Society of Architectural
Historians in Richmond, Virginia, in April 2002.
I am thankful to members of the audience and to
the session chair, Marc Grignon, who raised
insightful questions on that occasion, and also to
the Institut de recherche en histoire de larchitecture, Montreal, for a seed grant in support of this
research. I also acknowledge the helpful comments
of two anonymous JAE reviewers. Peter Collinss
papers are housed at the John Bland Canadian
Architecture Collection, McGill University. My colleagues at the School of Architecture, McGill University, have generously contributed to this paper
through their vivid memories of Peter Collins,
especially Maureen Anderson, Vikram Bhatt,
Martin Bressani, Ricardo Castro, Derek Drummond,
the late Norbert Schoenauer, Pieter Sijpkes, and
Radoslav Zuk. Cynthia Hammond, Jeffrey
Hannigan, David Krawitz, Tanis Hinchcliffe,
Anthony King, Louis Martin, Aure`le Parisien,
Peter Sealy, David Theodore, and Dell Upton also
helped with the challenges of researching this
elusive man.

Notes
1. The second edition also includes an exploration of the books genesis.
See Annmarie Adams, Notes on the Publication of Changing Ideals in
Modern Architecture, in Peter Collins, Changing Ideals in Modern
Architecture 17501950, 2nd ed. (Montreal: McGill-Queens, 1998), pp.
xvxx. Concrete was republished by McGill-Queens too in 2004 with a
foreword by Frampton, and a French version of Concrete has recently been
published: Peter Collins. Splendeur du beton, Les predecesseurs et loeuvre
dAuguste Perret.Translated by Pierre Lebrun (Paris: Editions Hazan, 1995).
2. Collins, Changing Ideals, p. 292.
3. For more on Collinss slides, see Annmarie Adams, With Precision
Appropriate: Images from the Peter Collins Collection, ARQ: Architecture
Quebec 75 (October 1993): 1819.
4. Peter Collins to Mr. Richards, 14 April 1961. John Bland Canadian
Architecture Collection, CAC064 009 019.
5. Peter Collins, Parallax, Architectural Review 132 (December 1962):
38790.
6. Frampton associates the minimal illustrations and their traditional
presentation in Changing Ideals with Collinss sense of academic
restraint. See his foreword in Peter Collins, Changing Ideals in
Modern Architecture 17501950, 2nd ed. (Montreal: McGill-Queens,
1998), p. viii.
7. Collins, Changing Ideals, p. 292.
8. Ibid., p. 293.
9. Ibid.,, p. 292.
10. Ibid., p. 290.
11. Collins, Changing Ideals, p. 292. Summersons position appears in
Heavenly Mansions and Other Essays on Architecture (New York: Norton,
1963), pp. 19091. I am grateful to an anonymous reviewer for
emphasizing the importance of this connection.
12. Collins, Changing Ideals, p. 277.
13. There are relatively few biographical sources on Collins. See the
special issues dedicated to his work: The Fifth Column 4 (Summer 1984),
which includes a brief biography by John Bland; and ARQ: Architecture
Quebec 75 (October 1993). See also Radoslav Zuk, From Theory to
Realization: A McGill Tradition, ARQ: Architecture Quebec 92 (August
1996): 15. More general explorations of his importance can be found in:
Tanis Hinchcliffe, Peter Collins: The Voice from the Periphery, in Louise
Campbell, ed., Twentieth-century Architecture and its Histories (London:
Society of Architectural Historians, 2000), pp. 17794. Also, the papers
from a one-day symposium on Collins held at the Canadian Centre for
Architecture on October 9, 1999, have been published as Peter Collins and
the Critical History of Modern Architecture, Irena Latek, ed. (Montreal:
IRHA, 2002), pp. 1819.
14. Although the design of the thesis is overtly Modernist, Collinss slides
of the project include a series of precedents drawn from pre-Modern,
traditional architecture: the refectory of the Dominican Convent of S. Sisto
in Rome; the Aula Magna of Le College du Pape, University of Louvain;
a fourteenth-century crozier and the spire of Rheims Cathedral; the
Triptych of Odense Cathedral in Denmark; and the Seminary at Mechlin,
Belgium.
15. Peter Collins, Concrete: The Vision of a New Architecture: A Study
of Auguste Perret and His Precursors (London: Faber and Faber, 1959),
pp. xvxx. Frampton notes that the book title was perverse and

Peter Collins: A Study in Parallax 30

misleadingly complex, as it was actually three books in one. See his foreword to the second edition, xix.
16. More information is needed on how Collins came to meet Bland. He
may have been visiting Margarets family and dropped in on the School,
according to colleagues.
17. Although born in Lachine, Quebec, Bland had studied planning at
the Architectural Association in London and was a member of the Royal
Institute of British Architects.
18. Peter Collins, In Place, The Guardian (Manchester), September 25,
1962.
19. Collins worked seven days a week and wore a sports jacket to
McGill on Sundays. He stayed in his office every night until
Margaret telephoned to say dinner was ready. Personal
correspondence from Derek Drummond, April 16, 2002.
20. See Peter Collins, Stock Exchange Tower, Montreal, Architectural
Review 139 (June 1966): 43338. A particularly interesting set of
slides of buildings under construction are those of Frank Lloyd
Wrights Marin County Civic Center. Collins labelled buildings under
construction u/c.
21. See Annmarie Adams, Changing Ideas about Changing Ideals, in
Latek, ed., Peter Collins and the Critical History of Modern Architecture
(Montreal: IRHA, 2002), pp. 3043.
22. Peter Collins, Expo- and After, Canadian Architect 11 (October
1966): 4748.
23. His attitude to the profession may also have been related to the
comfort he found in exclusivity. There is no evidence to suggest that
he ever practiced again, once he left Paris, yet Collins maintained his
membership in both the PQAA, the RAIC (he was a Fellow), and the

31

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RIBA. He described himself, too, as an architect, rather than a historian,


although most of his prizes and honors were for his books and articles.
24. Collinss relationship to his contemporaries, such as Sigfried Giedion,
Colin Rowe, Reyner Banham, Joseph Rykwert, and Manfredo Tafuri, is
a rich and largely unexplored subject and his personal papers abound
with correspondence with key figures. The relationship of Collins and
Nikolaus Pevsner is touched upon in Adams, Changing Ideas,
pp. 3043. Alberto Perez-Gomez situates Collins vis-a`-vis hermeneutics
in his Architectural History as Intellectual History: Peter Collins
Partial Hermeneutic Project, in Latek, ed., Peter Collins and the
Critical History of Modern Architecture (Montreal: IRHA, 2002),
pp. 12032.
25. I am grateful to Tanis Hinchcliffe for finding and describing
Collinss birth certificate. He was born on August 13, 1920, at 123
Beckett Street, Leeds (subdistrict North Leeds). Ann Collinss address
on the certificate, however, is 10 Manchester Street in London W.,
which was a residence connected to University College Hospital.
Hinchcliffe speculates that Ann Collins may have worked in London,
and gone to Leeds to give birth. Another confusing detail is that
Collins lists Vera Collins as his mother in his will.
26. 123 Beckett Street is in Harehills, an industrial area close to the
city center. I am grateful to Anthony King for comments on the area
and its back-to-back terraced housing. Personal correspondence
from Anthony King, April 25, 2002.
27. Adnan Morshed notes the role of father-seeking in modernist
architectural theory in his film review, Architecture as a Means of Filial
Discovery: Nathaniel Kahns My Architect, JAE 58, no. 3 (February
2005): 60.

28. Drummond recalls that the coat of arms was from the set of the
Red and White Review, perhaps My Fur Lady, rescued by Collins
from the garbage. Personal correspondence from Drummond,
April 16, 2002.
29. Drummond remembers that Collins said this frequently over the years,
and more intensely just before he died. Personal correspondence from
Drummond, April 16, 2002.
30. Peter Collins, Winnipeg, Edmonton, Toronto: Three New International
Air Terminals: An Appraisal, RAIC Journal 41 (February 1964): 4448.
31. Peter Collins, Classics in Controversy, The Guardian (Manchester),
March 3, 1960.
32. Collins admired Venturis Complexity and Contradiction
in Architecture, although he criticized its central
argument. See Editors Postscript, SAHJ 26
(October 1967): 198.
33. Joseph Rykwert notes that Collins ultimate loyalty was to Perret
and the whole of his architectural thinking can be considered as a
justification of Perrets architecture. Even when the master broke what
would seem to me one of the cardinal points on which Collins was so
insistent, and that is the belief that the architect must always work within
the given contexta belief from which he departed in the reconstruction of
Le Havre. See Joseph Rykwert, The Rule and the Law, in Latek, ed.,
Peter Collins and the Critical History of Modern Architecture
(Montreal: IRHA, 2002), p. 107.
34. Collins overdosed on sleeping pills. Drummond remembers that
Collins, who had taken sleeping pills for years, was increasingly
worried he was addicted to them.
35. See Classics in controversy, The Guardian (Manchester), March 3, 1960.

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