Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Table setting for feasts at the Eames House

Ray Eames put a great deal of thought into the table setting, making her guests wait until she felt it was perfect. That activity seemed partly a performance for the guests’ benefit, partly a ritual for the completion of the house itself. That clutter on the breakfast table: an old lady’s fetish, or an unacknowledged subversion of the house’s austere Modernist grid? The Eameses referred to their taste for ornamentation as ‘functional decoration’, a term laced with what we now call ‘spin’. Functional decoration was a visual contrast to the products of mass production, an acknowledgement of irrationality in the face of the most rational. Perhaps in that tables we were presented with an explosion of consciousness on the significance of waking and facing the day, honouring it with a review of the commonplace, the stuff of millions of mornings around the globe. Were we not confronted by information on that table? The Eameses were, after all, pioneers of the multi-screen presentation, believing that a modern audience could ingest copious ideas through the juxtaposition of images. At the end of the century, with our current mania for ‘mid-century Modern’, it is important to remember that the Eames’ legacy is not the plywood chairs, nor their refined version of the industrial aesthetic, but the contemporary taste for information overload, and the aesthetic that goes with it: articulated, decorative, multicultural, democratic and made up of millions and millions of tiny bits.







Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Monday, December 29, 2014

Charles Eames and Steve Jobs

We’ve found some interesting comparisons between Steve Jobs and Charles Eames recently. 
Over at the "gigaom" website, one of San Francisco’s most influential tech websites, writer Om Malik suggests those who have read the Steve Jobs biography should see the documentary Eames: "The Architect and the Painter" as an addendum to the book. He notes the similarities between Charles Eames and Jobs; “they both were very clear in distinguishing what is design and what is style. And more importantly both made simplicity their mantra”. He references a review of the film that appeared in the New York Times that also references Jobs in its introduction questioning whether Jobs, like Eames was “primarily a designer, an engineer, a computer nerd or an artist? A benevolent guru or the center of a cult of personality?” The article is well worth reading, find it here.
The comparisons being made are certainly thought provoking and it will be interesting to see how Jobs legacy grows as time and technology moves on – will he will remain as revered as the Eameses still are today, half a century later?
Read the full gigaom article here.


Saturday, December 27, 2014

Friday, December 26, 2014

A very Eames Christmas

Charles Eames in front of a Christmas tree constructed from bent plywood chair legs (1949).


Wednesday, December 24, 2014

A selfie (1957)

That's a selfie by Charles Eames as seen through his Christmas tree ornament in 1957.


Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Keith Yamashita: tip #4

Fourth tip from Keith Yamashita, "Fifteen Things Charles and Ray Teach Us", december 1999.
Previous tips in this blog: Tuesday, December 02 2014, Tuesday, December 09, 2014, Tuesday December 16, 2014



Monday, December 22, 2014

Christmas cards

The Eameses saved hundreds of christmas cards from friends, family and colleagues - some among the greatest artists and designers of our time.
From top to bottom: Bob Wirth (1948), Jackson Pollock (1946), Haku (1967).







Friday, December 19, 2014

A poster as a Christmas gift

To celebrate last Milan Design Week, Corraini Editore asked to many graphic designers and illustrators from Italy and abroad to reinterpret the "concept of design" with a poster. In many cases they have "adopted" the Eames: here are three good examples !
All the posters are for sale in Turin at NB Notabene bookshop.


(Courtesy by Corraini Editore)



Thursday, December 18, 2014

Alexander Girard

Alexander Girard is widely known for his contributions in the field of American textile design, particularly through his work for Herman Miller (1952 to 1975), where he created fabrics for the designs of Charles and Ray Eames.
On the occasion of the first archival reintroductions of furniture and screen-printed fabric panels by Alexander Girard, Herman Miller and Maharam celebrated his life and work with a temporary installation in New York City's Meatpacking district. Titled "Alexander Girard: An Uncommon Vision" the showcase launched during the International Contemporary Furniture Fair last May. 

A curated exhibit of archival designs and ephemera exposed visitors to the unique vision and diverse abilities Girard brought to Herman Miller during his tenure as design director of the textiles program.
New products and new fabrics served as the backbone of a Girard-inspired living room where visitors could relax and read from a selection of material curated by the Girard family.









Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Solar Do Nothing Machine (1957)

The other week as domuseweb.it noted, in 1957 Charles and Ray Eames designed the Solar Do-Nothing Machine for Alcoa, the Aluminum Company of America.
True to the Eameses’ belief that toys are not as innocent as they appear, the machine was
one of the first uses of solar power to produce electricity.
In the 1990s, Eames Demetrios discovered unedited footage of the wonderful machine. He cut it together to produce a new film that shares a bit of its flavor for future generations to enjoy.

Via loves.domuweb.it:
http://loves.domusweb.it/solar-do-nothing-machine/#.VIhRvK5LhNE.facebook

Photography by Charles Eames
© 2011 Eames Office, LLC



Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Keith Yamashita: tip #3

Third tip from Keith Yamashita, "Fifteen Things Charles and Ray Teach Us", december 1999.
Previous tips in this blog: Tuesday, December 02 2014Tuesday, December 09, 2014





Monday, December 15, 2014

Sell your ignorance and you have an unlimited repertoire.

A powerful insight from Richard Saul Wurman, the founder of TED, describing Charles Eames’ educational work for IBM and others:
“Sell your expertise and you have a limited repertoire. Sell your ignorance and you have an unlimited repertoire. Charles Eames was selling his ignorance and his desire to learn about a subject. The journey of not knowing to knowing was his work.” (quote from the movie "The architect and the painter", 2011)


Below: Ray and Charles Eames selecting slides for the exhibition, “Photography & the City”, 1968. © 2011 Eames Office, LLC.



Friday, December 12, 2014

Suggestion for a Christmas gift #2

An inspirational combination of quirky British style and lively cosmopolitanism. 
Designers, stylists and artists from across the country and around the globe make the capital their home. 
Celebrating the city’s rich mix of living spaces – with several eamesians pieces – "Creative Living London" is an exclusive peek inside the personal spaces of the city’s most ingenious talents.
This stunning book is sold in Turin at Nb NotaBene Bookshop.


Emily Wheeler, Creative Living: London, Thames and Hudson, 2014.
Photographs by Ingrid Rasmussen




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Thursday, December 11, 2014

Circus like Acropolis

The layout of the Circus under canvas is more like the plan of the Acropolis than anything else: it is a beautiful organic arrangement established by the boss canvas man and the lot boss /.../ the concept of “appropriateness,” this “how-it-should-ness,” has equal value in the Circus, in the making of a work of art, and in science.
Charles Eames


Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Rare images from the Golden Age of Circus

The Circus Book: 1870-1950 is a magnificent volume from Taschen exploring the circus as a living organism and a way of life, from its history and sociology to its glamor and discipline, through 650 stunning images, culled from a collection of 30,000 spanning 40 different sources, including many of the earliest photographs ever taken of the circus, as well as rare images by Charles and Ray Eames. More than 80% of the images have never been published, and most have never even been seen before.

Noel Daniel, Circus, Taschen.






Tuesday, December 09, 2014

Keith Yamashita: tip #2

Second tip from Keith Yamashita, "Fifteen Things Charles and Ray Teach Us", december 1999.
Previous tip in this blog: Tuesday, December 02, 2014.





Monday, December 08, 2014

Eames Spotting: Madonna for Versace

Madonna in Versace advertising campaign, which features an Eames Soft Pad Aluminium Group Chair in white leather.


Friday, December 05, 2014

Billy Wilder

For his friend, the famous movie director Billy Wilder (above), in 1950 Charles Eames designed this special chair in which the restless Wilder can easily jump around while watching television.
(Courtesy Time Life)



Film titles by Ray Eames for the movie "Love in the Afternoon" directed by Billy Wilder in 1957.




Thursday, December 04, 2014

Suggestion for a Christmas gift

"Fifties House", the first book in House & Garden's 'Decades of Design' series, has gone on sale and what's most surprising is how much of the book's content is fashionable yet again. 
Taken from the exclusive archives of "House & Garden" magazine, the book features several Eamesians pieces, room-by-room inspiration and plenty of savvy ideas for everything from colour schemes to small spaces.
In Turin this precious book is sold by Libreria NB Nota Bene, Via Bellezia 12.



"Fifties House" by Catriona Gray with a foreword by Terence Conran, Conran Octopus, £ 30
Via www.octopusbooks.co.uk




Wednesday, December 03, 2014

House of Cards (1952)

Created in 1952, the most successful toy of Charles & Ray Eames is a series of cards printed with images, that could be built into three-dimensional structures of various shapes and sizes. Charles and Ray's view of toys was that a point can be made and something can be learned by both adults and children. The message is that we have only to look at our immediate surroundings and the things we use and love for a deep and lasting appreciation of art in its truest form.




Tuesday, December 02, 2014

Keith Yamashita, "Fifteen Things Charles and Ray Teach Us", december 1999: tip #1

While Charles and Ray Eames didn't write this book (*) themselves, Keith Yamashita has managed to capture their spirit on the pages of this little treasure. It's almost as if you had Charles and Ray as your personal design coach. The book makes the assumption that you know something about their work, but even if you don't you can still gain from the advice (and if nothing else it's a great starting point to research their work). While I like to see pictures in a book aimed at designers, the few words speak volumes. The tips have a very zen like quality, for example tip number 2 is "Notice the ordinary." This book would make a great gift for any creative friend you have, or if you find yourself in a rut!
--
(*) This book is out of stock



(to be continued)