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Charles &
Ray Eames
The work of husband and wife design team Charles (1907-1978)
and Ray (1912-1989) Eames established a new identity for
American interior and graphic design, and conceived an
arena for the development of multi-media and corporate
design strategy. Perennial admirers of the details of
everyday life, the Eames collected hundreds of photographic
images and outfitted both their home and their office
with an array of folk art and objects from around the
world. Their house, made from prefabricated elements,
and their office, remain today as examples of an astonishingly
unique and fertile breeding ground for some of the classic
mid-century modern designs.
Charles was born in St. Louis and studied architecture
at Washington University, graduating in 1928. Throughout
the 1930's he was a part of several architecture practices
in St. Louis, designing houses in and around the city,
as well as two churches in Arkansas. In 1936 he went to
Michigan to study at Cranbrook Academy of Art and stayed
there until 1940, spending the last year as a design teacher.
While at Cranbrook he met Eero Saarinen and collaborated
with him on the groundbreaking and award-winning "Organic
Design in Home Furnishings" competition at the MoMA.
Their curvy armchairs and dining chairs offered a new
method of production, molding a plywood shell in three
dimensions, but they hadn't yet honed their production
methods, so the chairs were upholstered over these shells.
Ray was born in Sacramento and studied painting at the
Art Students League and the Hans Hoffman School in New
York. In 1936 she helped start the radical American Abstract
Artists group, lauding avant-garde art and protesting
galleries with stringent and traditional policies about
what to exhibit. She left New York for Cranbrook in 1940,
but was only there for several months before she and Charles
married in Chicago and moved to Los Angeles.
In the early 1940's the Eames received the chance to experiment
with new methods of bending plywood on the work they did
for the Navy wartime effort. They produced plywood airplane
parts and molded leg splints that were already so close
to abstract art that it was no stretch for Ray to customize
and exhibit them as such. They applied these techniques
to their furniture design and began turning out series
like the "Dining Chair Wood," known as the "DCW,"
the "Lounge Chair Wood" and "Lounge Chair
Metal," known as "LCW" and "LCM"
respectively. The Eames' approach to chair design was
to work off of the idea of a shell as the seat, shaped
to fit the body so that upholstery was unnecessary. In
the late 1940's they came out with a series of reinforced
molded fiberglass shells that could be attached to a number
of different bases like the "Eiffel Tower,"
"Cat's Cradle," and one that would make it a
rocking chair. Around 1950 they also released the Eames
Storage Unit, a modular system of shelving that had brightly
colored panels and was adorned with sliding and pull down
doors in fiberglass and with their signature dimpled wood
front. They also came out with a series of wire chairs
that were mesh shells on wire rod bases. In 1956, a famous
present for their friend Billy Wilder, a leather upholstered
lounge chair and ottoman, was released as one of their
most luxurious and expensive pieces. This chair is also
featured prominently in many photographs of the Eames'
house. The late fifties and sixties saw the release of
their "Aluminum Group" of indoor/outdoor furniture,
as well as the popular "Tandem Shell Seating"
and "Tandem Sling Seating" designed for airports.
The Eames worked with the company Herman Miller, a collaboration
that included the furniture designs as well as advertising
and showroom design.
A variety of toys, small objects, films and exhibitions
are also part of the scope of the Eames Office. In the
1960's they began focusing in particular on corporate
films and exhibits for Westinghouse, Polaroid and IBM.
To make palatable IBM's rapid technological advancements,
the Eames designed exhibits like "Mathematica"
and the IBM Pavilion for the 1964 World's Fair in New
York. "Mathematica," imbued with a sense of
fun not often seen in science presentations, featured
animated mathematical "peep shows." The IBM
Pavilion had a multi-image exhibit called "Think,"
projected on dozens of screens in front of tiered risers
filled with people and dubbed the "People Wall."
The number of screens and the rate at which images flew
by were innovations that set the scene for today's multi-media
presentations.
Like many modernists, the Eames believed that affordable,
mass produced, well-designed furniture and objects for
the home were tools that could bring about an environment
ripe for social change and betterment. Over several decades
in which they were almost constantly working, the Eames
took on the roles of decorators, entertainers, educators
and artists. Their work, and expansive work philosophy,
helped define an American style, summed up by Ray as,
"what works is better than what looks good. The 'looks
good' can change, but what works, works." |
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