Peggy Deamer (née: Margaret Deamer; born February 15, 1950) is an architect, architectural educator, and Emeritus Professor of Architecture at Yale University.
[1] Her research explores the nature of creative work, stretching from a psychoanalytic interpretation of art production and reception – initiated in the dissertation on Adrian Stokes, who was analyzed by Melanie Klein – to neo-Marxist examinations of creative labor.
She is the founding member of the international advocacy group, The Architecture Lobby (TAL).
[3] Her dissertation was on the British art critic, Adrian Stokes.
Montauk House, Montauk, NY, 1999 (Deamer+Phillips)[5] Waccabuc House Addition, Waccabuc, NY, 2003 (Deamer+Phillips) Kaiwaka House, New Zealand, 2016 (Deamer Studio)[6] John Q. Hejduk Award, Cooper Union, 2021[7] Artist Residency, "Labor," Santa Fe Art Institute, 2020[8] Recent articles include “Office Management,” in OfficeUS’s Agenda, “Work” in Perspecta 47, “The Changing Nature of Architectural Work,” in Design Practices Now Vol II, The Harvard Design Magazine no.