magazine

Another and perhaps more important consequence of the move to Los Angeles was the exposure of Ray and Charles Eames to the busy world of modern architecture and architectural thinking in Los Angeles. Since the 1920s, led by Austrian immigrants Rudolph M. Schindler and Richard Neutra, Los Angeles was a center of modern trends in architecture. Moreover, Arts & Architecture, then the most important US publication of its type, was based in Los Angeles. Last but not least, Herbert Matter, a prominent avant-garde photographer and graphic designer, also lived in Los Angeles then. His wife, Mercedes Matter, was a good friend of Ray Eames and had studied with her under Hans Hofmann.

At first, the Eameses rented an apartment in a house designed and built by Neutra, who was both the architect and their landlord. Gregory Ain, an architect and student of Neutra, also worked at their office. The Eameses became friends with Herbert Matter, and he took many photographs of their work. In some of them, objects made by the Eameses are seen together with sculptures made by Herbert Matter’s friend, Alexander Calder. One of Calder’s sculptures stood in the Eames home. John Entenza, the editor-in-chief of Arts & Architecture, also become a friend of the Eameses. Ray Eames produced several covers for his magazine.

 

 

 

 

 

The floor to ceiling windows in the steel-framed CSH #9

Photo by Julius Shulman

 

case study houses

Entenza and his magazine’s most ambitious undertaking was the Case Study Houses project. With the war almost over, Entenza understood that a plethora of young war veterans would be in the market for new homes after returning. The idea of the Case Study Houses was to demonstrate the advantages in cost and comfort of houses built in new ways. The magazine bought several building plots in Los Angeles and commissioned local modernist architects to design and build model homes on them. Each house was featured in the magazine twice — as a project and then as a fully ready home. After the houses were built, they were opened to visitors and eventually sold. While the project did not raise much money for the magazine, it provided much to write about. The magazine bought several building plots in Los Angeles and commissioned local modernist architects to design and build model homes on them.

Charles Eames took part in the CSH project, building two almost adjacent houses. He designed the first, known as CSH#8, alone and the second, CSH#9, with Eero Saarinen. Unlike the other homes in the project, these houses were not meant to be sold. The Eameses moved into No. 8, and John Entenza into No. 9, though he did not remain long. The Eameses lived in No. 8 for the rest of their lives. While Charles and Ray did not have children of their own, Lucia Eames, Charles’ daughter from his first marriage, would come to live with them. The home now is occupied by Lucia’s children, the grandchildren of Charles Eames.

 

Created with Sketch.

Plan of
Eames House

Courtesy of Library of Congress

Eames House

Eames House
spiral staircase

Photo courtesy of Library of Congress


Eames House

Photo courtesy of Library of Congress

Windows in Eames House

Photo courtesy of Library of Congress

Eames House living room

© Eames Office LLC

 

Sitting area
of CSH #9

Photo by Julius Shulman

Entrance
to CSH #9

Photo by Julius Shulman

Entrance 
to CSH #9
CSH #9
Photo by Julius Shulman
Sitting area 
of CSH #9

Evening at CSH #9

Photo by Julius Shulman

 

Created with Sketch.
Created with Sketch.
Created with Sketch.
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