缅北强奸

Julia Gersovitz

B.Arch. 1975 Montreal, QC June 1999

I guess the first question I would like to ask you is how you decided to become an architect and why 缅北强奸?

Well, how I decided to become an architect I think is that my father, quite frankly, felt that architecture be the best combination of my talents. I was very strong in science; I was very good in mathematics. I can draw and paint. And my mother is an artist and my father is an engineer. To some extent that, for most people, says it all.

[00:33:22]

And then you decided to attend 缅北强奸.

缅北强奸, it was really- you know, Montreal- I graduated from high school in 1969, and if you were academically good enough to get early acceptance at 缅北强奸, there wasn鈥檛 really the idea that there is today that you would go away. Certainly not the whole idea that flourishes still in the States that you have to go away to college as some sort of rite of passage. And in Montreal in 1969, if you could get into 缅北强奸 and it had the programmes you wanted, that鈥檚 where you went.

[1:09:11]

So you entered in, what, about 1970 in the fall?

Well, I was the first year to go into CEGEP. But at that time, 缅北强奸 had to have a transitional CEGEP there or they would have been sitting there for two years with no students waiting for the first CEGEP class to come in. So 缅北强奸 set up a CEGEP system for that transition period of two years and I went into Engineering CEGEP for two years and then I went into Architecture in 鈥71.

[1:37:21]

Which would- when you entered in 鈥71. I guess what we would like to talk about are some of the professors that tried or didn鈥檛- or were successful in teaching you. And also some of your memories of the classes or the courses that were influential in your career, either on the positive or negative side. We like a little of both of those.

I suppose. I must say that the professors who taught me who I remember the most fondly are certainly Peter Collins and John Bland and Gerry Tondino. I don鈥檛 think that I remember- and a man named Salomon who taught our Engineering Law course, which was a very good course. Most of the other courses I don鈥檛 remember as being necessarily seminal in my life. I mean, there were some good professors; there were some professors that continue to still to be teaching and are, you know, good, but the people who were galvanizing, I think, were John Bland and Peter Collins.

[2:47:19]

Did Peter, I digress here for a moment, but did Peter have an influence on your particular career?

He was very, he was a very strange teacher, in that to some extent, for one thing, you have to understand that in the early 1970鈥檚 when we were taking our course, we did not have any history before 1750. P.C. set this arbitrary date that he was interested in post-1750 and we had no courses in Architectural History that predated that. So we arrived kind of and were plunked into this soil and he started lecturing us at this rather difficult level. He also chose favourites and he could be very mean to people he didn鈥檛 like and very, very kind and nurturing to people he did like and he was very fond of me.

[3:44:14]

Okay, you answered my next question! I guess we鈥檙e kindred spirits because he was very fond of me too. And it worked out well. It was very encouraging when you succeed in a course that you really like and you do well.

Right, right. And he, you know, he would give you a sense that you were of value. But that鈥檚 counterpointed by the fact that some students, without much reason, did not receive that kind of treatment, and received the opposite end of the pendulum.

That seems to be consistent throughout his career.

Perhaps.

[4:19:26]

How about John Bland? He must have taught you Canadian Architecture.

He taught me Canadian Architecture, History of Canadian Architecture, which I took over from John Bland about ten years ago and have been teaching ever since. He also taught me Design Studio. And that was quite wonderful. You know, there are moments in your life when you say- when you suddenly- somebody says something to you and there is a big change in your life. It happened to me in grade six and it happened to me with John Bland when he suddenly said to me in one course or studio or crit, 鈥淏oy, you really can design in three dimensions. You have an extremely good grasp of three dimensions, of plan and section鈥. And that was sort of like, 鈥淚 do?鈥

[5:03:06]

You weren鈥檛 aware of it and he just, he was.

I don鈥檛 think I was necessarily aware but he pointed it out to me and somehow that became important.

You ever heard that compliment again?

No

I guess you live with it, right.

I guess I live with it.

Tell me, you also were exposed to some degree to Stuart Wilson. How did that work out?

I don鈥檛 remember Stuart Wilson鈥檚 class with any joy. In fact, it remains when people get together sort of a discussion point that鈥檚 a bit raw. And in fact, I鈥 ll table this for the end of this point, but he taught me- the way I have taught for twenty years is the antithesis, I hope, of what Stuart Wilson taught. Stuart Wilson was bone-mean to our class. He terrorized his students. He gave us wacky assignments that had an enormous amount of effort put into them for to this day, I don鈥檛 see the point. He was a terrible sexist, which you could put down to his age and training, but if you counterpoint it to John Bland, for example, you can鈥檛 say it was a universal symptom of the age. He would come in and, you know, I remember distinctly him coming into one student who had pasted down his paper with raw edges of the cheap velum. And he looked at it, and this kid had spent hours on this drawing. Whatever it was, he had spent a long time. And Stuart Wilson went over to him and said, 鈥淵ou know, edges like this, torn off like this, they could rip鈥. And he then tore the drawing in two and threw it into the garbage. And there was another time in which he would lean over your drawings with this cigarette ash that would become longer and longer and longer, and then on one kid鈥檚 drawing, he just let the ash drop and said, 鈥渙h, sorry鈥 and rubbed it 鈥榯ill the drawing was a mess and had to be destroyed, so that he terrorized students for something that I don鈥檛 think of as a learning experience. I don鈥檛 think you have to coddle the students and tell them everything they do is wonderful. You have to maintain a critical eye. But I don鈥檛 think that there is any way that you have the right to use your position as a professor to destroy the students.

[7:28:25]

I suspect he was of an age that nothing could have really been done about that. You know, I don鈥檛 think Bland could have- he was just hoping that he would eventually retire.

I don鈥檛 know.

How about, was Norbert there?

Norbert was a very good teacher and he taught us for studio and he taught us for History of Housing and I did enjoy Norbert鈥檚 courses. You know, a very gentle way of teaching with his wonderful voice and that pouch he always wore on his belt. I, you know, when I mentioned the teachers at the beginning, I should have talked about Norbert, I didn鈥檛. Derek gave us History of Civic Design and he also taught us studio and you know he was quite a counterpoint to Stuart Wilson.

[8:14:01]

Did Bruce have any [unclear]-?

Bruce didn鈥檛- yeah, we were the first year that got this mood box project. And one of my memories of Bruce was he was much younger than- we were, you know, just out of CEGEP and I remember one of the kids, Ken London actually saying, 鈥淪o, can we call you Bruce?鈥 And Bruce just looked at him as if that was the most incomprehensible thing to him in the world. And I guess Ken London had come out of either Dawson or Vanier, which in those days pretty well was, you know, quite loose. And he expected that this would be continued on and Bruce made it clear to him that that wasn鈥檛 going to happen.

[8:51:21]

One of the people you mentioned earlier is Gerry Tondino. I guess he was there at the school until a couple of years ago. I guess he鈥檚 been a bit ill and he鈥檚 sort of retired now. But he, I guess was in鈥

He鈥檚 a marvelous teacher

鈥ot only Sketching School but in the Freehand Drawing and so forth. Great man, great.

An excellent teacher. And you know, recently, I鈥檝e had the opportunity to go back and take some life drawing classes now in my forties with a different kind of sense of maturity. And I still can鈥檛 get the whole figure on the drawing, which I remember was a problem with me with Gerry, but in all truth, you know, I have only to think back to how good a teacher he was and how he also- it seems to me that one of the things about teaching, as John Bland did in his studio courses, is to try to see what鈥檚 the best thing about each student鈥檚 work and pull that out of them. Not to denigrate them as others might have done but really to say, 鈥淗ere鈥檚 a strength. Let鈥檚 work on that鈥. And work on what the student sees the value in and try to strengthen that rather than, you know, there is a tendency sometimes to have the students execute your own design work. And that鈥檚 pointless as a project.

[10:09:29]

Was John Schreiber there at all?

He didn鈥檛 teach me at all. I don鈥檛 think he was there when I was there. There was a period in which there was some sort of kafuffle鈥

Yeah.

鈥nd he wasn鈥檛 there.

How about- do you have any recollection of visiting critiques or critics?

A lot of our professors- the visiting profs that we had were mostly practitioners in the city. Tom Blood was my thesis advisor and I really enjoyed working with him. You know, this was twenty-five years ago and he was a very good thesis critic for me. Joe Baker was still as the class so he wasn鈥 t a visiting professor. Wit was hardly there at all. He was still in minimum-cost housing and he hadn鈥檛 developed the larger vision, shall we say, that he developed in the last twenty years. Wit of all the profs that I can remember he had the most radical change in himself from being this kind of dour guy who, you know, spent a lot of time talking about five-gallon flush toilets to suddenly embracing this kind of sense of home and house. Vecsei was there as a visiting critic.

That was Eva?

No

Andre.

Andre. But aside from that, I don鈥檛 really remember that. There wasn鈥檛 the- nowadays, the students are exposed to a lot more visiting profs from out of town. I don鈥檛 remember that as being something that we had. I mean, obviously profs were from the city.

[11:59:21]

Can you talk a little bit about your career subsequent to university? You graduated in what year did you say?

I graduated in 鈥75 and I went to work first for Arcop, then for Tom Blood. Then I made the decision to go to graduated school and I went to Columbia and did a Masters in Historic Preservation from 鈥78 to 鈥80. And I came back to Montreal. And I had been offered some jobs in Boston and in New York City. But I really wanted to come back to Montreal. My family was here and I really felt an enormously strong connection to the city. My thesis had been on the Square Mile. You know, I had spent two years researching Montreal鈥檚 nineteenth century architecture and I really wanted to come back. Anyway, I went into see- visit Arcop, which, as you know from your own experience, it was pretty well an open door. Anyway, I walked in and Art Nicholson in his slow, gravelly, tall voice, he said, 鈥淲ell, you know, we鈥檙e going to announce this project tomorrow, Julia, and it sounds like you鈥檇 be good for it鈥檚 because it involves some old buildings鈥. And it was Alcan. And simultaneous to that, Pieter Sijpkes and Derek, I think, had been instrumental in getting me some teaching position, an adjunct position at 缅北强奸, which I鈥檝e continued to this day, almost twenty years of adjunct professorship. And the combination of coming back to the city I wanted to come back to, working on this project called Alcan, which, of course, grew into Maison Alcan and became a very important project in the country, and teaching was sort of irresistible. So I came back in the summer of 鈥80 and I worked at Alcan until it opened. I was in charge of the historic buildings and design and the preservation aspects of the historic buildings. And at the end of it, I went to see Ray and I said to him that- I was earning ten dollars an hour and I wanted eleven, and Ray said- and the project was a big success, and the work that I did, you know, was really- everybody was very pleased with it.

[14:14:06]

It was so successful that all sorts of people took credit for it, as you well know.

And Ray was very generous about giving me credit for the historic buildings. And I asked for this extra dollar and he said no and I said, 鈥 Well, then I鈥檓 going to go鈥. And I left and I started my own office. And really, I must admit to you, not by any large game plan of the universe but I guess, you know, because they didn鈥檛 give me the extra dollar. And that was in 鈥83. And I鈥檝e continued since then in private practice with now two partners, one of whom was in my class at 缅北强奸, Alain Fournier and the other, Rosanne Moss, who I had been working with since 1983 and I鈥檒l talk in a minute about the office. But aside form that, I鈥檝e also continued to teach at 缅北强奸 and I teach as well at the U of M a Master鈥檚 programme in Conservation. I鈥檝e sat on one provincial cultural properties commission and two municipal cultural properties commissions, which I still sit on today, the Jacques Viger commission. And I鈥檓 very involved, as I have been since the seventies, with Heritage Montreal. So I cover sort of the activist and the municipal structured issues [unclear]

[15:47:20]

With your education, particularly as a result of Columbia, was probably quite unique in Montreal.

It was at the time. One of my students from 缅北强奸, Julie Boivin went about ten years after me and she did exactly the same course. She鈥檚 now working for the city in charge of their monuments and does restoration of the monuments in the parks. She鈥檚 excellent.

Do you find that you- the experience and the teaching that you鈥檝e acquired, the knowledge that you acquired at Columbia, do you use that at all on a day-to-day basis?

Oh, yeah, absolutely. I mean, admittedly, after twenty years one hopes one refreshes it, but the basis is really there. I think it was essential to have gone and done that Master鈥檚. And the thing that I find most rewarding, I must admit, is the combination of practice and teaching. Because often, as you know from your experience in practice, you get inundated by the day-to-day paperwork and administration and discussions with clients and your intellectual challenges sometimes get second. And school and the students push that back towards your forefront. So you have a kind of balance that occasionally, if you don鈥檛 have that, I think that it would be hard to maintain that. One of the things that I do in my lecture courses, and I think this is a valid thing to do, is I don鈥檛 have carousels set aside that says 鈥淢asonry Conservation鈥, 鈥淚ntro to Historic Preservation鈥, whatever it is. Each year that I give the course, I reassemble the slides completely from start again. And it鈥檚 true that there鈥檚 a bones to the structure, but it also allows me to have spent another year thinking about an issue and maybe changing something about the technology, changing the examples to the extent that I think the course is fresher for that.

[17:42:11]

Do you ever run out of time?

Ah, time! Somebody asked me how I manage all of this, because I now have two children. I have a husband and I have two children who are at this moment seven and nine who are the greatest [unclear] of my life. You know, last night I was honoured at this banquet as a distinguished woman in Montreal. And a variety of women came up to me and said, 鈥淗ow do you balance all this?鈥 And they wanted some pearls of wisdom and I sad, 鈥淵ou know, in a sort of way, anything that I have is a middle-class cushion鈥. I have a car, I have a phone in my car, I have care for the children that is very reliable. I have my parents, I have my in-laws and I have a practice where if there is an emergency, I can leave it because I鈥檓 the boss. I have a very understanding and supportive husband. So I have a very middle-class support system. The real question is if you turn to somebody who is, say, you know, a cashier at Wal-Mart, is a single mother and has no car and has to take the bus and you ask her how she copes. I think we can cope, partially yes, I cope with a lot of things that I suppose maybe women might find daunting. I don鈥檛 know. I think I know of what I鈥檓 doing and therefore it鈥檚 easy enough for me to do it. But it鈥檚 a thin line and if something falls off that line and disturbs your balance, you fall off the high wire for a bit and you climb back up. But I must admit to you, you know, that it is a sort of- we鈥檙e middle-class people and we have middle-class cushions.

[19:29:06]

So we鈥檇 like to hear a little bit about your office that you鈥檙e presently running and the type of work that you do and any other thoughts that you have on architecture.

Well, our office has three sort of distinct, not always separate, but three distinct volets. Tracks, I suppose would be the word, although that sort of doesn鈥檛 sound very nice. One is historic preservation, or conservation, as we tend to call it more in Canada. And that leads us into a lot of different work. Because, you know, there are a lot of offices that specialize in commercial and they do only the same kind of building over and over again or industrial. What we do is because we鈥檙e dealing with either historic buildings or buildings that have some historic context to them or sites that have some sort of historic context. We鈥檝e done banks; we鈥檝e done hotels. We鈥 re working on the west block of Parliament Hill with Arcop in joint venture. We鈥檙e working on the Harbour Commissioner鈥檚 building for a man named Daniel Langlois in Montreal. It will be a vast range of things that are inserted into historic buildings. We did a shelter for women in a converted garage, a building. So that anytime there鈥檚 an existing building, we are often called into work with that building. So it can be quite exciting because it鈥檚 not- you don鈥檛 fall into the track of doing the same kind of work over and over again and it鈥檚 not formulaic in consequence.

[21:10:17]

The second aspect and reason that it has no real consonance with the historic preservation work is work in the far North that Alain takes care of. So we are doing a lot of work for the Cree and the Inuit in what鈥檚 called le Grand Nord. And obviously there, there are no buildings that can be conserved as historic. It鈥檚 a new land, in effect. There are some Hudson鈥檚 Bay posts, I understand that could be on the verge of historic, but there aren鈥檛 the collection of buildings that you might get in Dawson City, for example, where there would be settlement in the North but not in the far North. And then the third one is residential housing, mostly renovations, sometimes new construction.

[21:58:06]

And you鈥檝e done a fair amount of that, too.

Yeah.

Now you鈥檙e doing work at 缅北强奸 right now, are you not?

Yes, we鈥檙e do-

Is it the students?

No, what we鈥檙e doing right now is work on the historic buildings, roofing and masonry repairs, largely to try to catch up with the deferred maintenance programme that, you know, was a very unfortunate consequence of not having- getting money. And for the last year and this year, we鈥檝e been working on trying to repair buildings that have been brought to their knees.

[22:31:37]

It鈥檚 a lot of catching up to do and it鈥檚 quite depressing, I鈥檓 sure. It is for me, I鈥檓 sure that it must be for you, when you walk through a lot of those buildings. I go through, because I live on Pine Avenue, frequently, in the winter, I go up through the McIntyre building there. And I see- it鈥檚 almost- you almost wish the students would get involved together and dedicate a day or two to try- I mean, it鈥檚 just the dirt.

Well, you know, what I feel is interesting fallout of this, is that you come to realize that the buildings that were built in the nineteenth century, and these are buildings that were built by the wealthiest men in the country so that they had access to the best craftsmen, to the best architects of the day, although it does turn out as a sidebar that some of their details wasn鈥檛 really perfect for Quebec climates, but these buildings have been almost brought to their knees in terms of no maintenance. And yet they鈥檙e in better shape than some of the buildings built in the fifties and sixties where there鈥 s quite substantial failure. And of course, since these buildings don鈥檛- the nineteenth century buildings don鈥檛 rely on the kinds of systems to keep them going that many of the buildings that were built in the sixties and are hermetically sealed, you don鈥檛 get that kind of- you know, the windows still open therefore, the building鈥檚 still in effect, air-conditioned. And because the way they鈥檙e built, it鈥檚 true that there鈥檚 unit masonry, but it鈥檚 not a problem with a repetitive anchor failure as there is on the curtain walls where you get one anchor failing and they all start to fail and the wall鈥檚 falling down.

[23:13:16]

I suspect that is the problem on the McIntyre building. Because they redid the whole curtain wall.

Yes, they did.

I think Gavin Affleck was a consultant.

And he was working with J.P.L. on that, yeah.

I guess it鈥檚 inevitable that I鈥檒l get around to asking you, but would you do it all over again?

I don鈥檛 think there鈥檚 another profession that is so demanding of a principal in an office to be a psychologist, an architect, in understanding a space, a colourist, a lawyer in understanding what to do on a site when the contractor begins to act up, dealing with the zoning regulations, understanding your maneuverability within current regulations and your responsibility to the public. And your responsibility to society on the whole. I don鈥檛 think a lawyer ever does that. I don鈥檛 think other professions have to hand-operate on so many different levels. That being said, I do think it is a wonderful profession. I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 recognized. I think it has a sex appeal still left over from the days of Paul Newman and Towering Inferno. It鈥檚 still a sexy profession, right? If a movie wants to paint somebody as being somehow interesting, they鈥檙e an architect. But I think that the reality is a lot harsher. It鈥檚 a lot harsher for the young and for most architects who kind of grind out a life. I mean, when you think, Jim, that a real estate agent gets five percent to sell a building and you might get that five percent to design and be responsible for that building, and be in bed with some contractor that you鈥檝e never met before and who might be the slipperiest devil on earth, tell me who is a fool. You know, there is something that is decidedly wrong.

[26:15:25]

It鈥檚 interesting because I concur with everything that you鈥檝e said. I guess the two big disappointments: the architect, having heard your description of the sort of the lifestyle of an architect you would expect, to compensate, your salary would have to be in the, you know, the hundreds of thousands of dollars a year, which it never is for ninety-nine percent of the architects. And that is one of the ultimate realities of the practice. The other thing is, of course, the difficulty in getting work.

Yes, although, I鈥檇 hate to be an engineer or a landscape architect, who are even further down the totem pole. But yes, there is this aspect of getting work.

You in having created in a sense a niche, because of the training that you had and the degree of education that you got, you developed that and that will always be an anchor in the business.

I think you might reasonably ask me why I鈥檓 a partner in an office and I鈥檓 a woman. And I think that of the hundred people that you鈥檙e interviewing, few are probably in that position as women. And I think it is because I went into this which, to some extent, certainly when I began practice, wasn鈥檛 considered to be- you know, it was considered to be 鈥渙kay, fine鈥.

[27:30:09]

One of the great powers of Derek鈥檚 directorship was that he was able to marshal a group with very different points of view. And some of them, you know, not- can you imagine being in a room with Stuart Wilson and Peter Collins and Joe Baker? You know, men who we perceived of having radically different points of view and radically different positions on even social behaviour in a kind of way and social responsibility, and maneuvering them towards a course of actions so that the school had a coherence. That was John Bland鈥檚, one of John Bland鈥檚, great strengths, which we didn鈥檛 really see as students, but I understood very vigorously when I was teaching. And it was certainly true of Derek as well. He was able to get, you now, academics are supposed to be in many ways the least cohesive of groups and he got them to all work together. And that was a tremendous aspect of his directorship.

[28:29:23]

When you think of it, there are some similarities other than what you鈥檝e spoken about, between John and Derek in many ways. Did you have anything, other comments you might want to make about the directors?

Well, you know, there was a lot of talk when I was a student, and that talk continued on when I was teaching, because you got- you did get the sense that nothing ever- that the arguments from the students didn鈥檛 really change. I mean, their clothes might change and their haircuts might change but the conversations didn鈥檛 really change. And one of the discussions was, you know, that John Bland didn鈥檛 give a very forceful direction to the school, that it wasn鈥檛 like Princeton under Michael Graves or it wasn鈥檛 like Columbia under whoever, and that that was somehow perceived of as a weakness. I actually feel it was a great strength to the school, because in each design studio, you were really shown a very radically different point of view. The way John Bland ran his studio and what he put on- what he emphasized was radically different from Joe Baker鈥檚 design studio or even from Rad Zuk鈥檚 or from Derek鈥 s. And I think that as a student, you came out more rounded than you would have had you gone into a studio where everything, everybody subscribed to a single doctrine and you were in fact indoctrinated. And when I got to Columbia, although I wasn鈥檛 in the School of Architecture exactly because I was already in my Master鈥檚 in Conservation so I was tangential to the school, I could experience that and it was kind of creepy. And I think that that, despite the fact that the students all said, 鈥淲e need direction! We need direction!鈥, they really got what they should have had under both Derek and John. Norbert鈥檚 probably continued that as well, and I don鈥檛 mean that he promoted a different point of view, but as I say, he wasn鈥檛 really- if he was the director then, and I鈥檓 beginning to believe he was for one year that I was there, it was the year that I was already flexing my wings and leaving, it wasn鈥檛 my seminal years. I think I was there for five or six years and that鈥檚 a long time. By the fifth and sixth year, you were sort of feeling that you were already on the way out the door.

[30:53:00]

The other thing that I remember very distinctly from John Bland was his tremendous generosity as a teacher. You know, often, you do encounter individuals in any walk of life who have knowledge and guard it from you or use the fact that they have the knowledge to in some way control you. John Bland was always, if it was historic research or if it was design, he was tremendously giving of that. You know, and he treated you as an equal. Here you were, you were twenty years old; he was I don鈥檛 know, what, certainly over- in his fifties and sixties, and yet he felt that if you were interested in something he was interested in, he was going to listen to you and take your observations and work with them and build on them. And you suddenly became part of a group of scholars and that was exciting, very, very exciting.

[31:50:04]

And he seemed to always be available towards the students. He would always make it a point to see them whether it was for good news or bad news.

You know, Professor Collins did that as well and he was also in his funny, you know, he鈥檇 sort of sit there in this very imposing office with a flag behind you and humph in a way. And it was harder to get that feeling that you were of value, but he did share with you, as I say, perhaps only to the people that he thought of as having value, not as universally as John Bland did, but he was also terrifically motivating. And certainly John Bland was that to the core.

One of the people or the professors that was there when I was there, I鈥檓 just wondering whether he was still there, was Harold Spence-Sales.

No, he wasn鈥檛 there.

Oh, okay. So you don鈥檛 have any comment to make on Harold!

No, except I heard his name. That鈥檚 all.

Thank you.

[32:47:16]

Back to top