South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

A six-decade tour of Barbie’s Dreamhouse­s

- By Julie Lasky

In 1962, three years after Barbie was born, Mattel introduced Barbie’s Dreamhouse: a folding ranch house that was the first of many domiciles that evolved with the times. After beginning modestly in cardboard, the Dreamhouse­s became plastic, pastel, palatial and electrifie­d, often all at once. They acquired elevators, sun decks, modern European furniture, recycling bins and multiple bedrooms — though Barbie remained perenniall­y single and holding the lease (or mortgage).

To honor this 60-year milestone, Mattel collaborat­ed with the design magazine PIN-UP on a limited-edition art book, “Barbie Dreamhouse: An Architectu­ral Survey.” The 151-page monograph tracks the evolution of Dreamhouse­s through six examples, shown with their original furnishing­s and architectu­ral blueprints.

What readers will not see is Barbie herself, or any of her friends or family. With Greta Gerwig’s “Barbie” movie opening in July and the doll’s hyper-pink aesthetic hitting Instagram like a strawberry milkshake tsunami, feminist revulsion toward the doll is taking a back seat to ironic celebratio­n.

“Camp has become the white noise of our culture,” said Whitney Mallett, a contributi­ng editor of PIN-UP, who edited the book with Felix Burrichter, the magazine’s founder.

The book examines the cultural and architectu­ral forces that shaped the Dreamhouse­s over the decades, including Queen Anne Victoriani­sm, midcentury modernism and back-to-the-land granola-ism.

It also quotes writers, artists and architects on how Barbitectu­re shaped their own psyches. “Barbie’s house is infinitely more exciting than Barbie herself,” writes Elvia Wilk, a cultural critic. “The structures we live within — fantasize about living within — say more about our lives and dreams than plastic bodies ever will.”

1962: Cardboard fantasy

Barbie’s first home, a cardboard ranch house that unfolded from a case, is strikingly masculine, with its bold plaids and midcentury wood grains. Was this the only acceptable aesthetic for a young woman embarking on a single life in 1962? Yes, if she is a college student, Burrichter said, pointing out the varsity pennants and lack of a kitchen. “I think it’s a co-ed dorm room,” he said.

1974: Bohemian townhouse

The three-story townhouse features a mod palette and Victoriana touches. Burrichter and Mallett associate the clubby bohemian decor (Tiffany lamps, greenery) with the era’s singles bars.

1979: Progressiv­e cabin

This A-frame was constructe­d in three sections that could be pulled apart and reconfigur­ed. Doing so reminded Burrichter of the houses built by Charles Moore and other progressiv­e architects at Sea Ranch, the Northern California developmen­t.

1990: Bubble gum mansion

Barbie went full bubble-gum pink in the 1990s, and “really leaned into hyperfemin­inity,” said Kim Culmone, Mattel’s senior vice president of design. The Doric columns and Palladian windows are also a natural companion to the McMansions sprouting in American suburbs.

2000: Future Victorian

This lavender Queen Anne Victorians­tyle mansion seemed like a throwback when it was released before the new millennium. But it bore an unmistakab­le resemblanc­e to the house featured in a painting that hung in the original Dreamhouse — as if Barbie “manifested” it, Mallett said.

2021: Content house

While the first Dreamhouse unfolded like a sitcom set for a single camera, the most recent iteration is a TikTok-ready tower that can be filmed from infinite angles — not unlike the real-life collab houses where influencer­s create content.

 ?? EVELYN PUSTKA/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? Barbie’s first home, a cardboard ranch house that unfolded from a case, from 1962.
EVELYN PUSTKA/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS Barbie’s first home, a cardboard ranch house that unfolded from a case, from 1962.
 ?? ?? CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: The three-story Barbie townhouse from 1974; the A-frame Barbie cabin from 1979; the bubble-gum pink Barbie mansion from 1990; the Barbie content house from 2021; the Queen Anne Victorian-style Barbie mansion from 2000.
CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: The three-story Barbie townhouse from 1974; the A-frame Barbie cabin from 1979; the bubble-gum pink Barbie mansion from 1990; the Barbie content house from 2021; the Queen Anne Victorian-style Barbie mansion from 2000.
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