A. Jane Duncombe


A. Jane Duncombe was born in Whitby, Ontario, Canada. She was a residential designer based in the San Francisco Bay Area some of whose architectural designs can also be found in Illinois and the rest in California. Duncombe studied at the Art Institute of Chicago School of Industrial Design and developed interest in design and architecture through her undergraduate studies. Duncombe was also one of the few female architects who became an apprentice at Frank Lloyd Wright’s Taliesin.

Early life and education

Duncombe attended and earned a Bachelor of Architecture degree at Art Institute of Chicago. She was taught by a Polish architect, Marya Lilien, who was the first woman architect apprenticed to Frank Lloyd Wright at Taliesin, Spring Green, Wisconsin. Lilien established the interior architecture program at the School of the Art Institute in Chicago.

Career

Duncombe co-founded an architectural firm Duncombe-Davidson with Lois Davidson Gottlieb, who is also one of the few women who apprenticed to Wright’s Taliesin at that time. The collaboration began around 1951 and was based in Sausalito. Duncombe-Davidson gained reputation in designing and delivering residential designs throughout Marin County, California. After the end of the collaboration in 1956, Duncombe went on to charter her own business as an independent architect.

Notable projects

Duncombe passed away in 2015, at the age of 90. Her papers documenting her career, spanning the years 1952 to 2002, are collected at the International Archive of Women in Architecture located in Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. The collection consists mainly of architectural drawings, as well as plot plans and photos of architectural designs.
Duncombe was included in "A Girl is a Fellow Here" ~ 100 Women in the Studio of Frank Lloyd Wright", a documentary film produced by the Beverly Willis Architecture Foundation in 2012. She was also included in A Taliesin Legacy: The Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright's Apprentices , written by Tobias S. Guggenheimer in 1955.