Monday, December 28, 2015

Enjoy the Ant-Man titles !

Enjoy the "Ant-Man" movie titles by Sarofsky: they are an intentional homage to the iconic "Powers of Ten", the famous short film directed by Charles and Ray in 1977.

Monday, December 21, 2015

Christmas gift idea (3): "Charles & Ray Eames", by Maryse Quinton

In this book, the contemporary designers questioned in the insets all place them in their personal pantheon. Giulio Cappellini, for example, believes they are the greatest designers of all times. 
Maryse Quinton (with Eames Demetrios and Alexandra Forterre) reviews four decades of creation, enhancing certain key moments, such as the construction of their home on the heights of Pacific Palisades, and offers a complete panorama. It talks of their relations with big industry (Alcoa) or the intelligentsia (Billy Wilder) but lacks two must-have elements: a real chronology and an index.


Maryse Quinton, Eames Demetrios, Alexandra Forterre, "Charles & Ray Eames", Éditions de La Martinière, Paris, 2015.
Available at nb:notabene Torino, via Bellezia 12 - via Giolitti 26 a.





Monday, December 14, 2015

Off the grid: Charles and Ray Eames' Wire Chair, revisited






Fifty-one Charles and Ray Eames Wire Chairs reinterpreted by artists will be auctioned in Paris today (14 December) to raise money for La Source, a charitable association created by French artist Gérard Garouste to help children express themselves through art in four French centres.
The chairs were donated by Vitra and reinterpreted by leading artists, interior designers, fashion designers and architects, many of whom also participate in La Source workshops each year. Famous names on this year's list include Erwan and Ronan Bouroullec, Philippe Starck, Matali Crasset, Antoine + Manuel, Odile Decq, Christian Louboutin, India Mahdavi, and, of course, Garouste himself.
The designer one-offs come under the hammer of Simon de Pury, chairman of the Philips art auction house. Maître de Pury explains that the charity auction is exceptional in his experience, as artists surpass themselves to transform the object for auction into something unique.
'The Wire Chair's grid seems to have particularly inspired the artists, we're seeing a great deal of invention and a lot of humour,' he says.
5.5 designstudio reinterpreted the chair as a barbeque, Christian Louboutin added a backrest in the form of his signature red leather sole, while Philippe Starck added padlocks in a tribute to the Pont des Art bridge. Most poignantly, Sarah Lavoine and Jean-Charles de Castelbajac created a tribute to Paris following the recent tragic events.
The chairs will be exhibited in the Hôtel de l’Industrie in Paris until today; the auction begins at 8pm French time this evening.

Via wallpaper.com
Read more at http://www.wallpaper.com/design/charles-and-ray-eames-wire-chair-revisited#bCoGDGL04ZlLimqT.99

Monday, December 07, 2015

Christmas gift idea (2): "Mid-Century Modern Complete" by Dominic Bradbury

"Mid-Century Modern" offers a comprehensive overview of all aspects of the subject – furniture, lighting, glass, ceramics, textiles, product design, industrial design, graphics and posters, as well as architecture and interior design, use of innovative and affordable materials and forms of mass manufacture, and newly developed precepts of ‘good design’.
Nearly 100 major and influential creators of the mid-century period are highlighted from Scandinavia, Western Europe, America, Japan, Brazil and Australia. They include icons such as Saul Bass, Robin Day, Charles and Ray Eames, Marimekko, Isamu Noguchi, Dieter Rams, Lucie Rie and Paolo Venini, as well as architects Alvar Aalto, Philip Johnson, Richard Neutra and Oscar Niemeyer.
An additional illustrated dictionary features hundreds more key mid-century designers and manufacturers as well as important organizations, schools and movements.
The book showcases classic designs as well as little-seen rarities, and unusual objets d’art as well as mass-produced items and includes thirteen specially commissioned essays by renowned experts.


Dominic Bradbury, Mid-Century Modern Complete, Thames and Hudson, London, 2014.
Available at nb:notabene Torino, via Bellezia 12 - via Giolitti 26 a






Monday, November 30, 2015

Christmas gift idea (1): "Alexander Girard" by Todd Oldham & Kiera Coffee

Renowned designer Todd Oldham and writer Kiera Coffee have created this massive monograph on seminal designer Alexander Girard as the ultimate tribute to this design icon.
This 672-page book covers virtually every aspect of Girard’s distinctive career. As one of the most prolific and versatile mid-20th century designers, Girard’s work spanned many disciplines, including textile design, graphic design, typography, illustration, furniture design, interior design, product design, exhibit design, and architecture. Exhaustively researched and lovingly assembled by designer Todd Oldham, this tome is the definitive must-have book on Girard’s oeuvre.
Girard’s repertoire includes an incredible list of projects, including his bold, colorful, and iconic textile designs for Herman Miller (1952-1975), his typographic designs for La Fonda del Sol restaurant (1960), his celebrated retail store Textiles and Objects (1961), his own Girard Foundation (1962) that houses his extensive, personal collection of folk art from around the world, and his complete branding and environmental design for Braniff International Airways (1965).
Girard’s work continues to inspire new generations of designers and admirers, and this beautiful book is the ultimate tribute to his legacy.



Todd Oldham, Kiera Coffee, "Alexander Girard", Ammo Books, Los Angeles (Cal.), 2011.
Available at nb:notabene Torino, via Bellezia 12 - via Giolitti 26 a








Friday, November 27, 2015

Charles and Ray Eames's Kids Toys: As Wonderful as You'd Expect

In a new article posted by Herman Miller, Alexandra Lange, Curbed's architecture critic, examines the Eameses legacy of design intended for children, including playful prefab structures and boxes meant for building. It's clear from the analysis, accompanying archival images, and cool interactive toy that the duo valued playful design, and a gift for inspiring that same appreciation in others.

A central tenant of the design philosophy of Ray and Charles Eames was an embrace of play as an end in itself, the idea that creativity should be unconstrained and unburdened. While the couple will always be remembered for their contributions to furniture, design and cinema, it was their approach to experimentation, and their interest in seemingly tangential topics such as clowns, that inspired their seemingly endless sense of wonder and a constant drive towards exploration and improvement. As champions of those beliefs, it only goes to follow that they'd also be some of the world's foremost toy designers.

Ph. courtesy Herman Miller Archive





Wednesday, November 25, 2015

TIME's memory: Bobby Fischer dragged one of the building’s Eames chairs to Iceland!

This week, TIME is moving to new headquarters—so here's a look back at the old…


* * *
Bobby Fischer dragged one of the building’s Eames chairs to Iceland!
What happened was that the company commissioned Charles and Ray Eames to design the reception rooms for TIME in the new building, and their work included a Charles Eames chair. When editors moved into the space, the lore goes that they decided the chairs were so nice that they wanted to keep the chairs themselves rather than let random people sit in them. Some top staffers were notorious for hoarding them and moving them whenever they switched offices. But it wasn’t just the staff. Bobby Fischer somehow took a liking to the seat, deciding it was perfect for chess-playing. When he took on Boris Spassky in Iceland in 1972, it was while sitting on an Eames TIME-LIFE chair that he’d had brought over for the occasion.

Bobby Fischer of the U.S. right, and Boris Spassky of Russia, play their last game together in Reykjavik, Iceland, in this Aug. 31, 1972 
Courtesy: AP Photo/J. Walter Green


Monday, November 23, 2015

The villa of James Bond’s nemesis in Spectre remembers the iconic modernist home of Charles & Ray

This moroccan villa is the home of James Bond’s nemesis in Spectre. The glass, metal and concrete structure appears in the latest Bond film as tensions comes to a head and James Bond arrives at the desert lair of villain Ernst Stavro Blofeld​. 
The house as it appears in the listing – surrounded by lush greenery – is almost unrecognisable from how it looks in the film, thanks to the special effects that transplanted it to a starker, dustier desert location.
In fact, the home is only eight kilometres from the Moroccan city of Marrakesh, not a long, desolate train ride through the Sahara Desert, as the film would suggest.
The contemporary-style villa was built in 2006 and designed by Algerian-trained architect Imaad Rahmouni​.
The two-level house has three bedrooms, three bathrooms and two reception areas. The expansive open-plan living area is flanked by a thin pond and is only three stepping stones away from the lawn.
The large glass windows with black framing – reminiscent of the iconic modernist home of 
Charles & Ray Eames – affords uninterrupted views of the lush garden, which is dotted with palm trees.
The centrepiece is the striking pool which runs perpendicular to the house.
Accompanying the main residence is a separate guest house with three more bedrooms and its own swimming pool.

Courtesy Domain.com





Friday, November 20, 2015

Cranbrook's Golden Age: How a Freewheeling School Changed American Design

Tuesday, November 17, 2015, by Patrick Sisson

Alumni visits don't get much more high profile than Ray Eames's brief return to Cranbrook Academy of Art in May 1980. Half of the dynamic design couple whose grabbag of inventive projects became synonymous with post-war Modernism, Ray, who had been widowed a little less than two years prior, was then living by herself in the trailblazing Case Study house she built with her late husband Charles. Known for its pioneering layout and polychromatic interior, the home, decorated with the vast quantity of objects, artwork, and collectables accrued by the couple over nearly four decades together, must have been a potent source of memories.
But Ray's trip to speak at the Michigan arts school where she met her husband in 1940 proved a similar catalyst for nostalgia. A Detroit Free Press article from that summer says she was "smiling continuously." During a discourse that covered all manner of design topics, she often "wandered into memories."

"It was an extraordinary time when we were here," Eames is quoted as saying. "There wasn't a degree involved, only people who were here to learn."

The legend of the Cranbrook Academy of Art, and its role as a prewar petri dish for American modernism, revolves around the brief period of time from roughly 1937 to 1941. Ray, Charles, and a host of future architects and designers crossed in and out of each other's paths, studying and teaching at the wooded campus roughly 25 miles north of Detroit. But Cranbrook's singularity didn't just stem from its collection of talent. An experiment in education by founder George Booth, a wealthy industrialist, his wife Ellen, and Eliel Saarinen, an eminent Finnish architect who designed the campus and served as the first president, Cranbrook was a new institution, a modern arts colony that reflected the times. The philosophies that Ray and her classmates picked up there could be considered the DNA of modern design: cross-disciplinary thought, organic forms, and a fidelity to experimentation and research.


courtesy curbed.com



Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Point of view: "The Atlantic" on Charles and Ray

The Vision of Charles and Ray Eames: how two designers from the 20th century influenced and predicted the way people would live in the 21st.

by Sophie Gilbert

*   *   *

In a 1972 short film titled “Design Q&A,” Charles Eames offered answers to a series of questions about design, a field in which he and his wife, Ray, had envisioned everything from medical splints and airport seating to low-cost housing and children’s toys. “What is your definition of design, Monsieur Eames?” asked the interviewer, Madame L’Amic. “One could describe design as a plan for arranging elements to accomplish a particular purpose,” Charles replied. They continued:

MADAME L’AMIC: What are the boundaries of design?
CHARLES EAMES: What are the boundaries of problems?

This Eamesian understanding of design as a solution rather than a luxury—as something that’s about industry as much as art—encapsulates the unique philosophy and vast influence of Charles and Ray Eames, a husband-and-wife team whose lightness of touch and Californian joie de vivre infuses contemporary offices and homes. Would Ikea be the same without the Eameses? Would Apple? Their work is best remembered via the molded-plywood and leather lounge chair that bears the Eames name, but their vision of design as something that could get “the best to the greatest number of people for the least” lives on in less tangible ways. The Eameses, above all else, helped democratize the genre.
/.../
But it’s impossible not to sense the Eamesian influence in low-cost, flat-packed furniture sold at Ikea, or Crate and Barrel, or Target. The way-it-should-be-ness of their chairs so infuses modern design that their own works have inspired countless contemporary imitators—something Charles himself might have appreciated. “To be realistic,” Charles Eames once said, “one must always admit the influence of those who have gone before.”
/.../
Much of their impact is harder to trace: The designer Dieter Rams, whose work for Braun is unmistakably felt in the work of Apple’s chief designer, Jonathan Ive, has credited them as an influence, and certainly Apple’s synergy of form and function, lightness of spirit, and commitment to process borrows heavily from the Eamesian model. Their belief that everyday objects can both define and provide meaning makes them one of the most enduring creative forces of the 20th century. They predicted the future even if they couldn’t describe it. “What is the future of design?” Madame L’Amic asked Charles Eames at the end of their Q&A. His response: a montage of images featuring fruit, plants, and flowers, as if to point at how the encapsulation of function and beauty has really been all around us, all along.

courtesy: theatlantic.com


Monday, November 16, 2015

Ron Frank dies at 84: Long Beach furnishings store was on modernism's leading edge.

Ron Frank, whose knowledge and savvy marketing of modern design helped keep his family's iconic Long Beach furnishings store in the vanguard of a powerful movement for 50 years, has died. He was 84.
Until Frank Bros. came along in the late 1930s, Long Beach wasn't known as a hotbed of modernism. But from their store on Long Beach Boulevard, the Franks — starting with Ron's father Maurice and uncle Ed — educated a broad public about the progressive aesthetic behind midcentury modern style.
Ron Frank took over the business in the mid-1960s and kept it on the leading edge for the next three decades with sophisticated promotion and marketing. He was particularly known for mounting playful in-store exhibitions that showcased the latest trends, including plastic, vinyl and inflatable furniture as well as the work of his friends Charles and Ray Eames.
"He had a thoughtful way of getting people interested in contemporary design," said Cara Mullio, who wrote "Long Beach Architecture: The Unexpected Metropolis" with Jennifer Volland and is co-curating an exhibition on Frank Bros. at Cal State Long Beach's University Art Museum that will open in 2017.
"His approach wasn't just here's some furniture … in a stagnant display. It was 'Let's have Eames chairs flying from the ceiling. Let's engage people in a very three-dimensional way,'" Mullio said. "Ron Frank definitely had a business sensibility, but coupled with that he was very creative."
Frank was the third generation of his family in the furniture business. His grandfather, Louis Frank, sold new and used furniture and appliances with his son Maurice at Frank & Son, founded in 1930 in a converted bus barn.
Frank Bros. was born in 1938 when the elder Frank retired and his other son, Ed, joined Maurice and persuaded him to focus on contemporary furnishings.
Their store — one of the first in the country to showcase Scandinavian furniture — became an engine for spreading the modernist ethic. Through Ed Frank's friendship with John Entenza, the publisher and editor of the influential magazine Arts & Architecture, Frank Bros. provided the furnishings for the Case Study houses, the influential experiments in residential design directed by Entenza and executed by such leading architects as Richard Neutra, Raphael Soriano and Pierre Koenig.
Ron Frank joined the business after completing his military service in 1954. In 1965 he took over the retail operation when his uncle Ed left to run Moreddi, the manufacturing and importing division.
By then, Frank was well-grounded in every aspect of the business. "He had chores there as a kid," said his daughter, Marni Good, who confirmed her father's death Wednesday at his Long Beach home from Parkinson's disease.
Born in Long Beach on Jan. 31, 1931, Frank attended Polytechnic High School before earning a business degree from USC in 1952. He spent two years in the Army, stationed at Ft. Ord and later in Germany, where he worked as a typist and cartoonist for a military newspaper.
At Frank Bros., he found an artistic outlet in producing witty copy for ads that ran in Arts & Architecture. In the late 1960s he began organizing shows that attracted a diverse clientele from around the Southland.
One of his shows, "The Emotional Eye" in 1970, featured a 6-foot-wide beanbag chair in a room painted black. The exhibits were a way to show people that furniture was about more than function.
"He had the ability to really give the user an enjoyment of life," said Peter Loughrey, the founder and owner of Los Angeles Modern Auctions, which specializes in modern art and design. "If you knew Ron, he always had a smile, a twinkle in his eye. That wasn't lost on Frank Bros. clients. It wasn't just an Eames chair you were buying, but you were buying a kind of optimism. If you were shopping at Frank Bros., you were shopping for optimism."
Frank's exhibitions and other innovations drew customers who were well-heeled as well as many who sought sophisticated decor on smaller budgets. For the latter group he introduced a layaway program and sold good copies of designer furnishings next to the originals.
"We were probably the only store in the United States where you could have a genuine Eames chair and a copy" side by side, he said in a video interview for the Getty Research Institute in 2013.
Many customers chose the original if they could afford it, but Frank was happy if someone on a schoolteacher's salary, for instance, chose the less expensive knock-off.
"He would give choices so that people who were very interested in contemporary design but couldn't afford it could still have it," Nancy Frank, his wife of 53 years, said in an interview Thursday. "It was very progressive at the time."
Besides his wife and daughter, Frank is survived by a son, Brian Maurice Frank; and four grandchildren.
In 1982 Frank sold the business to the Danica furniture company. He retained ownership of the building, but it was destroyed in a fire during the 1992 riots that followed the Rodney King verdict.
Frank preserved hundreds of Frank Bros. catalogs, ads, photographs, correspondence and other ephemera spanning the 52-year history of the family business. In 2009 he donated the archive to the Getty Research Institute, which regards the material as an important addition to its project documenting the tastemakers of midcentury design.
"We didn't have a tremendous amount of material about the interior design and vision," said Marcia Reed, chief curator at the Getty institute. "This really gives the back story on the vision that Ed, Maurice and Ron Frank put forward.


"The first Frank Bros. store in Long Beach. The store — one of the first in the country to showcase Scandinavian furniture — became an engine for spreading the modernist ethic.

Friday, November 13, 2015

Eames Hang It All - Vitra Black Collection

As you probably know, this midcentury classic dates back to 1953, a playful piece with a purpose - to encourage children to pick up their clothes and hang them up. It appealed to kids and of course, adults too in its original colourful finish.
Now it is back as part of the "Vitra Black Collection" on both black and and brown (aka chocolate). The black version has a powder-coated, steel-wire frame with wooden rollers in black ash with the brown version also using a powder-coated steel-wire frame, but with wooden rollers in walnut.




Monday, November 09, 2015

News: The new Brooklin Museum of food and drink is part Willy Wonka, part Eameses.

Before this week, the Museum of Food and Drink was largely conceptual. In the mind of Dave Arnold, an author, food history obsessive, and the founder of groundbreaking New York City bar Booker & Dax, MOFAD was not only already built, it had already begun planning future exhibits that could tour the country and enchant the public.
But MOFAD had to first open, which it did earlier this week. The 3,000-square-foot space in the heart of Williamsburg (it used to house a parking garage), on which the museum holds a five-year lease, is far removed from the museums of elementary school class trips. "We wanted MOFAD to look like Willy Wonka meets the Eameses" says Peter Kim, the museum's executive director.
The launch has been promised ever since Arnold birthed a Kickstarter in 2013 to raise funds for a MOFAD pop-up. Those contributions helped build MOFAD's first exhibit, a pop-up called 'BOOM! The Puffing Gun and the Rise of Breakfast Cereal,' but Arnold wanted to establish a permanent brick-and-mortar location for his culinary deep dives.
"We are not a science museum," he told. "Science is just a lens. We are concept- and experience-driven, and we wanted to showcase the grand story of how our food system got to be the way it is."
The first exhibit, titled 'Flavor: Making It and Faking It,' is an expansive look at the modern age of the flavor industry, which began in the late 19th century when German chemists discovered vanillin, the primary chemical compound of the vanilla bean. When the MOFAD team first began to workshop ideas, which also included an opening exhibit on food on the battlefield or a look at food from farm to toilet (says Kim, "That didn't seem like the best first course"), the concept of flavor was much more broadly defined.





Friday, November 06, 2015

News: "Silicon City: Computer History Made in New York"

“Silicon City: Computer History Made in New York", opening Friday, Nov. 13, is an exhibition at the New York Historical Society that charts the area’s rise as a technology hub from the 19th century to the 1980s.
“Silicon City,” begins with Samuel Morse’s telegraph and the many wonders that sprang from Thomas Edison’s New Jersey laboratories. In contrast to Silicon Valley (which was still largely made up of fruit orchards as late as the 1960s), such early inventions did not lead to wave after wave of entrepreneurial innovation. Instead they gave rise to vast, monopolistic or quasimonopolistic enterprises that helped define 20th-century America — chief among them IBM and AT&T. But during the ’60s, improbably enough, this spawned a fusion of art and technology that could only have begun in New York.
IBM is represented in “Silicon City” by such artifacts as a System/360 computer, from a line of mainframes that revolutionized the industry in the ’60s, and the groundbreaking film “THINK” that Charles and Ray Eames produced for the IBM pavilion at the 1964 New York World’s Fair.


The “Egg,” a multiscreen installation recalling the IBM Pavilion’s oval theater at the 1964 World Fair, at the "Silicon City" exhibition at the New-York Historical Society.CreditRead all at: www.nytimes.com/2015/11/08/arts/design/the-big-bang-of-art-and-tech-in-new-york.html?_r=0


The “Egg,” a multiscreen installation recalling the IBM Pavilion’s oval theater at the 1964 World Fair, at the "Silicon City".
Courtesy: Emon Hassan for The New York Times.
 


Wednesday, November 04, 2015

News: 'Peanuts' Creator Charles M. Schulz Makes It Into California Hall of Fame near Eameses

The man behind beloved characters like Charlie Brown and Snoopy joins inductees Charles & Ray Eames and many others.

*   *   *

“Peanuts” creator Charles M. Schulz officially made it into the California Hall of Fame Wednesday night, joining seven other California notables in the ninth class to be inducted.
Best known for the iconic comic strip which is slated to become a state license plate when enough takers purchase the Snoopy-laden plate, Schulz lived and worked in California from 1958 til his passing in 2000.
To this day, the “Peanuts” comic strip holds a beloved place in the hearts of young and old alike, bridging generations and cultures with its timeless antics and heartfelt messages.
Schulz, who lived in Santa Rosa, CA most of his life was honored with the Spirit of California medal along with Charles & Ray Eames and many others.

This year’s medal recipients join 88 Californians previously inducted into the California Hall of Fame for contributions to the worlds of art, science, literature, activism, technology, philanthropy, entertainment, business and sports.

Courtesy: United Feature Syndicate - Peanuts

Friday, October 30, 2015

News: Wegman’s Weimaraners go upscale at San Jose Museum of Modern Art with Eames' chair.

William Wegman went to the dogs long ago. After all, how could the artist, long known for his conceptual photographs of his Weimaraners, help it?
“They keep bumping into me,” says Wegman, 71, from New York City, about his current rambunctious sitters, Flo and her half brother Topper. “With a dog, that’s the way it was. They’re always looking at me, and I’m always looking back.”
This time around, in “Artists Including Me: William Wegman” at San Jose Museum of Art, the pooches can be found lounging on decidedly more high-class perches: Eames chairs. Or they’re posing in a faux Eadweard Muybridge freeze frame or mock Hans Hofmann abstraction — putting the, er, bowwow in the Bauhaus. Stoic, streamlined and ever enigmatic, they provide the visual language — and punch lines — for Wegman’s thoughts on high and low culture in this overview of photos, paintings, videos and drawings from the ’70s through the present.
The exhibition was assembled by the Krannert Art Museum at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana, where the artist received his master of fine arts degree in painting in 1967. Yet however long ago, the academy is never very far away for an artist coming up in the postmodern era. “I thought it was an interesting title,” Wegman says of the show, “because I’ve been doing a lot of work that had art references, something I was allergic to in the ’60s and ’70s, and it just so happened there’s this group of work that cuts across all the media I had been using.”
Those paintings of imaginary spaces incorporate art postcards he’d been gathering from museums like the Guggenheim. “Postcards are an endangered species these days,” he says. “Matisse, Picasso, anything like that seemed worth playing with. It isn’t a battleground anymore. It’s just common material.”


Ph. courtesy William Wegman



Wednesday, October 28, 2015

News: “Plywood, etc.” at the James Barron Gallery in Kent

James Barron invariably presents imaginative exhibitions and “Plywood, etc.” is no exception. The paintings, furniture and sculpture of ten artists working in plywood as well as other no-frills materials is on view at his gallery in Kent until November 8.

Plywood, fashioned from thin layers of wood glued together each layer rotated up to 90 degrees from the other, is a utilitarian material most often used for crates and construction. However, in the hands of artists and designers it can be transformed into works of art.

Plywood, of course, is often used for furniture. There is a chair and a table by Frank Lloyd Wright as well as a chair by Marcel Breuer in the exhibition. Most of all, however, plywood is synonymous with the designs of Charles and Ray Eames. The show features one of their chairs, a cabinet, a desk as well as an undulating screen they designed for Herman Miller. A pair of leg splints they made of molded plywood for soldiers carried from the battlefield in World War Two is one of the most interesting pieces in the show.

Made before the Eames had perfected the technique for molding plywood, the splint is the length of a man’s leg. In order to release the tension so the wood wouldn’t crack when they bent it into a curve, they left holes of several sizes, which allowed the bandages to be attached. The result is a piece of abstract sculpture. By the end of the war the Eames had made over 150,000 of these splints.

By Carla Lott

Read all at: http://themillbrookindependent.com/arts/%E2%80%9Cplywood-etc%E2%80%9D-james-barron-gallery-kent



Monday, October 26, 2015

A critical point of view on "The World Of Charles and Ray Eames" at Barbican Art Gallery

Article by Tabish Khan - Londonist.com
Read all at: http://londonist.com/2015/10/charles-and-ray-eames


It's safe to say that design and architecture wouldn't be what it is today without the work of couple Charles and Ray Eames. Their use of functional clean lines has influenced many modern buildings and a huge amount of contemporary furniture, including pretty much everything Ikea makes. But their design skills stretched much further with aeroplane stabilisers, magazine covers and a stretcher all part of their collective portfolio.

This exhibition aims to showcase the breadth of their work and provide an insight into their personal lives using photographs, videos, models, toys and chairs... lots of chairs. Fans of furniture design and the Eames's won't be disappointed by the vast amounts of items on display. But what about the rest of us who may not be familiar with the pair's work and legacy?

This is where the exhibition comes a cropper. While it bombards us with information and products, photos and videos to look at; there doesn't seem to be a narrative that's easy to follow. It's a sprawling show and it's difficult to know what to take away from it — this isn't helped by the fact there isn't a closing room or even a simple video that looks at how modern designers and architects are being influenced by the pioneering work of the duo.

The exhibition would have been better served with fewer items on display and more focal points throughout the show, a greater use of architectural models and finished products would have been much appreciated; alas we were only provided with notes, blueprints and photographs of a lot of their creations. There are a few examples of this including a living room of their furniture and a set of their toys, but these are the exceptions.

It's a heartfelt love letter to Charles and Ray Eames, but without the context and legacy, we often felt like a third wheel wandering this sizeable show looking for a guideline to latch on to. We left the exhibition feeling impressed by the work of the Eames's but unfulfilled. Considering the ticket price and the scale of this exhibition we were expecting a lot more.


Ph. courtesy: Tristan Fewings/ Getty Images

Friday, October 23, 2015

Opinion: "Eames has become a vaguely suggestive word applied to alchemise junk shop remnants".

As London's Barbican Gallery launches a major retrospective on Charles and Ray, Sam Jacob wonders whether it matters that the Eames name has taken on a life of its own.

*   *   *

Right now there are 11,085 results for Eames on eBay. Take your pick. Maybe you fancy a "Large Retro chair in faux lizard skin heals eames". Or a "Brass Gladiator Chariot Sculpture Mid Century Eames". Or a "Globe Hidden Ashtray Space Age Mid Century Modern Eames Era1960s". How about a "PIN UP & DESIGN SOEUR AURELLE Kinky Nun Stephan Saint Emett / Eames SCULPTURE", a "vintage 3 EAMES ERA MID CENTURY NATURE BOY CAVEMAN REAL RABBIT FUR" or a "Leopard Dining Chair Retro Luxury Sexy Ghost Posh Panton DSW Dressing Eames".
Kinky Nuns, Cavemen, Aztecs, Denmark, Brutalism, Regency, and Sputnik are all prefixes and suffixes to a huge homespun market of Eamsiness that falls under the banner of Mid Century – itself a vague term that lumps together a disparate array of design of a certain vintage under a saleable moniker.
Eames is no longer just a surname, no longer simply the signature of the design couple and the denominator of a specific body of work. It's become a hazy, vaguely suggestive word: an adjective rather than a noun.
Eames – outside of the world of design scholarship and commercial licenses – has become a word applied to alchemise junk shop remnants. A word whose prefix-polish transforms the value of the object to which it has been attached, a kind of culturally magic Brasso intended to bring out particular qualities in an object, even if those qualities aren't there in the first place.
It's a word that – in this space of internet bring-and-buy at least – has escaped all sense of its original origin. As if it had wafted out of the studio through an open window out into the world, its meaning atomising and spreading like a toxic cloud till some homeopathic remnant of its original particulates have contaminated the entire landscape. "Eames" is a gas cloud, a powerful atmosphere that has the power to Eamsify anything it touches.
These eBay phrases are also absurd, like surrealist word games or the kind of spam-language generated by algorithms to evade filters. Phrases that, against our expectations where words have some relationship to meaning, are a garbled babble that could never mean anything at all.
Of course this all happens outside of the policed official legacy of the real, original Eames. Outside of the worlds that cling on to values of authenticity, attribution, and legitimacy.

by Sam Jacob
courtesy dezeen.com 



Wednesday, October 21, 2015

The latest news, reviews and comment on Charles and Ray Eames by "The Guardian"

For the exhibition at the London Barbican Museum, "The Guardian" is publishing numerous articles: here we list a selection:

Monday 19 October 2015
By Olivier Wainwringht
>>> Party with the Eameses! Inside the modernist masters' riotous home
Charlie Chaplin and Billy Wilder used to party with Charles and Ray Eames at their house in Los Angeles – and play guinea pigs to their latest chair designs. Step inside the Eames House, a divine shrine unchanged since their deaths.
Read at: www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/architecture-design-blog/2015/oct/19/charles-and-ray-eames-barbican-modernist-masters

Sunday 18 October 2015
By Rowan Moore
>>> The World of Charles and Ray Eames review – prodigious and abundant talent
Their vision of America was too good to be true, but no one delivered style and genius like design’s perfect couple.
Read at: www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2015/oct/18/world-charles-ray-eames-review-barbican-rowan-moore

Sunday 18 October 2015
By Tamsin Blanchard
>>> Open house with Charles and Ray
The home Charles and Ray Eames built in Los Angeles is still the ultimate dream house.
Read at: www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2015/oct/18/charles-and-ray-eames-dream-house

Saturday 17 October 2015
By The Guardian
>>> The "World of Charles and Ray Eames" in pictures
A look at the Barbican’s new exhibition examining the fascinating and influential work of Charles and Ray.

Monday, October 19, 2015

How "Playboy" Magazine Helped Make Eames and Mies Famous.

News of the day: Playboy - its circulation and credibility in terminal decline - will no longer publish nudes. 

*   *   *
If you’re the type who reads Playboy for the articles — and of course you are — then this may not come as news to you: The rag, which Hugh Hefner founded back in 1953, not only had a hand in shaping the heterosexuality of the American male; it taught him how he could leverage architecture and design to bag a babe.

That’s the thesis of Architecture in Playboy, 1953–1979, an exhibition at the NAiM/Bureau Europa, in the Netherlands, that explores how the magazine depicted the major design players of the time. And it’s actually not too much of a stretch. Almost from its very start, Playboy made a point of featuring architect’s big shots, from Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies van der Rohe to Buckminster Fuller and John Lautner. And who can forget the famous (and downright respectable) spread featuring the midcentury design greats George Nelson, Edward Wormley, Eero Saarinen, Harry Bertoia, Charles Eames, and Jens Risom with their respective chairs? (See image below.)

The message here: Architecture and design are major forces influencing the world, and if you’re not familiar with the heavy hitters, perhaps you’re not a Playboy. Which isn’t to say that the magazine always upheld good taste—plenty of Playboy Pads in the '60s and '70s feature mega beds, replete with such essentials as a vibrator system, hi-fi stereo, humidor, and cocktail bar. But it did hold a mirror—even if that mirror was mounted onto the ceiling—to the design trends of the day, from midcentury modernism to inflatable architecture (headline: "The Bubble House: A Rising Market").

"Everything that happened in architectural discourse is presented in the magazine but it’s sexualized," Beatriz Colomina, the exhibition’s curator, told The Architectural Review in January 2011. "They started featuring Mies and Frank Lloyd Wright, and then in the '60s and '70s they started Playboy Pads, a series that reshot existing buildings—such as the House of the Century by Ant Farm and the apartment of Charles Moore; at the time he was the Dean of the School of Architecture at Yale, which could not be more stuffy, and to have his home presented as a Playpad is perverse as he was gay."

So should one divorce Playboy’s design coverage from its context? That would be like separating the bachelor pad from its objective—the conquest. Still, the show makes a case for Playboy being about more than objectifying women, though it certainly does do that. "It also embraced liberation, too," Colomina insists. "It’s more complicated than you’d think." Those design articles also include the few photos that are OK to ogle.

Architecture in Playboy is on view through February 9. Take a peek into the research of the exhibition here.






Friday, October 16, 2015

Catherine Ince, "The World of Charles and Ray Eames", Thames and Hudson, 2015

Published to accompany the major international exhibition at the Barbican, London, this definitive monograph explores the era-defining work of the Eames Office, an active ‘laboratory’ for over four decades, where the Eameses and their collaborators produced a vast array of pioneering and influential projects – from architecture, furniture and product design to film, photography, multi-media installations and exhibitions, as well as new models for arts education.

Drawing on new sources and unpublished material, and with newly commissioned texts by leading design experts, The World of Charles and Ray Eames brings together contemporaneous reviews and magazine articles, writings by Charles and Ray Eames themselves, personal correspondence and a thorough reference section to offer the most comprehensive overview of the designers in many years.

Catherine Ince is Curator at Barbican Art Gallery, where she recently curated ‘Bauhaus: Art as Life’, the largest survey of the renowned school to be staged in Britain in over forty years. Other projects include the international touring exhibitions ‘Pop Art Design’ and ‘The Fashion World of Jean-Paul Gaultier’.









Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Catherine Ince curator of "The World of Charles and Ray Eames" at Barbican (London) next week.

"Where do you begin with an archive that comprises over a million artefacts? This was the question I asked myself repeatedly when I started research on the work of Charles and Ray Eames and the Eames Office for a new exhibition at the Barbican Art Gallery. The papers of Charles and Ray Eames were transferred to the Library of Congress in 1988, with further bequests made in the past decade. The material includes some 300,000 slides; 30,000 contact sheets and prints and their corresponding 220,000 film negatives; sketches, drawings, plans and printed material related to the couple's many and various projects; film and sound recordings; administrative documents, office records, press articles, personal and professional correspondence as well as all manner of intriguing items, from decorative gift wrapping and notes scribbled on the back of Benson & Hedges cigarette papers to a handmade bee stored in a heart-shaped box. The Eames family archive also contains an extraordinary array of personal and professional documents, artworks and objects. In the early stages of planning for the exhibition Eames Demetrios, the Eameses' youngest grandson, asked me if I was aware of what I was getting into, if I was prepared to “dive into the ocean”. The Design History Society travel grant has allowed me to do just that.

"The travel grant has been invaluable, enabling me to undertake a initial scoping visit to the Library of Congress in Washington D.C. in order to understand collection content as well as to discuss the pragmatic issues involved in preparing material for loan. I viewed a representative range of materials from all aspects of the collection, which is divided across four library divisions: prints and photographs, manuscripts, motion pictures and broadcasting, and music. This survey and analysis was guided by the insight of the Library staff responsible for acquiring and archiving the collection. In addition to providing a comprehensive overview of the collection's organisation, they selected and presented material likely to be of interest for exhibition, particularly from the part of the collection more recently presented to the Library by the Eames family. This newer material adds extensively to the records of the early years of the Office and also includes many files related to the personal friendships and professional relationships Charles and Ray Eames maintained with many leading creative figures of the period. Professor Pat Kirkham is an advisor to the exhibition and much of her current research is focused on analysing aspects of this new material.


"This early-stage scoping visit introduced me to the extent, diversity and arrangement of the collection. Until this point, the contents of the Library of Congress Eames Archive - which is often discussed in terms of its scale - seemed to me gargantuan to the point of abstraction. Now informed by my first-hand understanding of the collection I was able to work much more effectively at a distance and in close consultation with Library archivists when analysing the Library's cataloguing resources. The collection cannot be absorbed entirely in the time I have to research and prepare the exhibition, so subsequent research visits demanded focus and careful planning. The Design History Society travel grant was awarded at a crucial stage in the development of the exhibition and has undoubtedly transformed the productiveness of my recent research visits to the Library of Congress. Exhibition preparation continues apace and The World of Charles and Ray Eames opens at the Barbican Art Gallery next week.

The exhibition will be accompanied by a new publication and extensive programme of events.



Via: Design History Society