Eames A Quick History In Design
Not everyone is familiar with the names Charles and Ray Eames but chances are you are familiar with their work
. No other designers in history have had such an impact on the home and office furnishings that we see today. Their legacy lives on through sleek and comfortable arm chairs, lounges and modern desks. So, who were the Eames and how did they change the way we see furniture forever? Take a quick stroll through the history of furniture design and find out.
When you step into an office, even a well appointed office, the first thing you think of probably wont be design, art and history. However, wherever we go there is a story behind each building, the placement of doors and windows, the choice of carpet, and the furniture placed inside of a space. Even cheap blemish furniture tells a story that dates back to a designer, a dream and likely smart business. Some furniture designers find their names listed with the prestigious artists of history. Ray and Charles Eames are considered to be as pivotal in the development of current furniture designs as Picasso and Dali are to art, and Mozart and Beethoven are to music.
Until the early 1940s furniture of all sorts was generally made of heavy hard woods and followed a basic and practical design blueprint. Any attempts to break out of the mold had not been found successful. What was being called
modern desks were really only slightly altered copies of the modern desks of years before. There was no new modern furniture available to the public until around 1943 when Charles and Ray Eames released their first line of innovative furniture. These furnishings included streamlined seating that could easily have been confused as abstract sculptures, executive desks that seemed to defy gravity and shelving units that hinted to Frank Lloyd Wrights designs in architecture. The mold was forever broken.
Office chairs prior to 1940, were usually little more than a straight backed oak seat on wheels. After the Eames got their fingers into office design, the desk chair became somewhere where art, comfort and practicality all intermingled. By the 1900s executive desks had also become stagnate as far as design was concerned. Offices were filled with cookie cutter box shaped desks, and cheap blemish office furniture. After 1940, executive desks became a status symbol and something to take pride in, thanks to the Eamess work.
Today we still see signs of Charles and Ray Eamess work even in the most traditional office. Much of the clientele seating you find in a well dressed office gets its lines from the 1940s designs of the Eames. The office chair so commonly used even in a humble cubicle is a spin off from the 1940s and 1950s creations of Charles and Ray. Thanks to a philosophy that was rooted in both art and usefulness these brilliant designers opened a window wide and shed some light on an otherwise dark and undiscovered platform for art. In fact, it was Charles Eames himself that asked the question Whoever said that pleasure wasnt functional? Thanks to his hard work and imagination, pleasure and function found its way into the office spaces that we work in today.
by: Todd Trieu
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