Rendell’s research, writing and teaching is transdisciplinary and crosses architecture, art, feminism, history and psychoanalysis. Her co-edited collections all explore different intersections between architecture and other disciplines, from those with an urban focus such Strangely Familiar and The Unknown City, to those with a particular interest in architectural history, such as Gender, Space, Architecture and Intersections, to those which examine the critical inflexions of art and architectural practice, such as A Place Between, Spatial Imagination, Pattern and Critical Architecture. Her first authored book drew on feminist theory to explore the methodologies of architectural history, through an examination of rambling, as a pursuit of urban pleasure in 1820s London. In her subsequent book, Art and Architecture: A Place Between, she introduced the term ‘critical spatial practice’ to investigate ‘the specifically spatial aspects of interdisciplinary processes or practices that operate between art and architecture’, and in Site-Writing she goes on to argue that criticism is itself a form of critical spatial practice. In The Architecture of Psychoanalysis she re-examines places between but this time in terms of transitional spaces, specifically those of the setting in psychoanalysis, and the history of the social condenser in architecture. Her most recent research engages with acts of displacement, related to the extractive industries, and to the London housing crisis and the displacement of tenants and leaseholders as a result of regeneration schemes specifically in Southwark. Her publications on these topics include ‘Giving an Account of Oneself, Architecturally’, the Journal of Visual Culture; ‘Critical Spatial Practice as Parrhesia’, special issue of MaHKUscript, Journal of Fine Art Research; co-edited with Michal Murawski, Reactivating the Social Condenser, a special issue of The Journal of Architecture, and the fictionella, Silver for Lost Rocks A Published Event. Rendell writes critical essays for artists, such as Daniel Arsham, Bik Van Der Pol, Jessie Brennan, Janet Hodgson, Jasmina Cibic, Apollonia Susteric and transparadiso, and for galleries and museums such as FRAC Centre, Orléans; Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin; and the Hayward Gallery, London, and gives talks for arts agencies, events and galleries such as the Serpentine Galleries, London; the Tate, London; the Barbican Centre, London; the Venice Biennale; and Art Angel. Rendell was a member of the AHRC Peer Review College Member and the inaugural Chair of the RIBA’s Presidents Awards for Research. She is on the Editorial Board for ARQ, Architectural Theory Review, GeoHumanities, The Happy Hypocrite, The Journal of Visual Culture in Britain, Ultima Thule and Zetisis.
Selected publications
Strangely Familiar: Narratives of Architecture in the City, 96pp., and 80 illustrations. Iain Borden, Joe Kerr, Alicia Pivaro and Jane Rendell.
A Place Between, special issue of The Public Art Journal, n. 2,, 56pp., 110 illustrations. Jane Rendell.
Gender, Space, Architecture: an Interdisciplinary Introduction,, 432pp., 17 illustrations. Jane Rendell, Barbara Penner and Iain Borden.
InterSections: Architectural Histories and Critical Theories, 330pp., 83 illustrations. Iain Borden and Jane Rendell.
The Unknown City: Contesting Architecture and Social Space, 533pp., with 100 illustrations. Iain Borden, Jane Rendell, Joe Kerr with Alicia Pivaro.
The Pursuit of Pleasure: Gender, Space and Architecture in Regency London,.
Critical Architecture, special issue of the Journal of Architecture v. 10. n. 3, 120pp., and 25 illustrations. Jane Rendell.
Spatial Imagination, 40pp., and 32 illustrations. Peg Rawes and Jane Rendell.
Art and Architecture: A Place Between,, 240pp., 63 illustrations.
Critical Architecture, 320pp., 88 illustrations. Jane Rendell, Jonathan Hill, Murray Fraser and Mark Dorrian.
Pattern, special issue of HAECCEITY. Ana Araujo, Jane Rendell and Jonathan Hill.
Site-Writing: The Architecture of Art Criticism,, 256pp., 80 illustrations.
The Architecture of Psychoanalysis: Spaces of Transition,, 296pp., 105 illustrations.
Silver. 96pp., 32 illustrations.
Reactivating the Social Condenser, special issue of the Journal of Architecture. Michal Murawski and Jane Rendell.