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Design June 8, 2011

Eames Chairs: A Canvas For Expression

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In 1951, while on tour of the Eames office, well-known New Yorker artist Saul Steinberg picked up a brush and painted a reclining woman on an Eames fiberglass arm chair—turning chair into art and beginning a long history of artists using the designs of Charles and Ray as canvases for self-expression.

While for many of us—myself included—the thought of a smudge, much less a deliberate brush stroke, on one of our precious pieces of furniture makes us cringe. But not the Eameses, who treasured Saul’s chair, and displayed it proudly.

Surely they would be delighted to see that artists today continue to find inspiration in their work and use their designs as a canvas for expressing their own artistic visions.

Check out Operation Design for pictures from Eames Inspiration, a charity event Herman Miller co-sponsered last year.

Comments (2)

I think the paintings enhance the design of the chair rather than detracting from it. The contours of the seat and back add depth to the artwork and the art highlights the simplicity and elegance of the chair design. If I bought an Eames chair, I would definitely paint it. Maybe with little people trying to scale the interior slopes with rock climbing equipment.

Daisy
San Diego Office Furniture

The painting of the woman reclining in the chair adds personality to the chair. I don’t know why anyone would cringe.
elitelighting

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