Plywood Sculpture, 1943
Designed by Charles Eames and Ray Eames
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Plywood Sculpture, 1943
Designed by Charles Eames and Ray Eames
Eames Office & Kettal / Eames Pavilion System / Modular Construction Kit / 2025
Charles & Ray Eames Residence,
The Eames House (also known as Case Study House No. 8) is a landmark of mid-20th century modern architecture located at 203 North Chautauqua Boulevard in the Pacific Palissades neighborhood of Los Angeles.
It was constructed in 1949, by husband-and-wife design pioneers Charles & Ray Eames, to serve as their home and studio. The house was commissioned by Arts & Architecture magazine as part of its Case Study House program, challenging architects to design progressive, but modest, homes in Southern California.
Charles and Ray moved into the home on Christmas Eve in 1949 and never moved out (Charles died in August 1978 and Ray died in August 1988).
Charles's daughter, Lucia Eames, inherited the home and created the non-profit organization, the Eames Foundation, in 2004. Still a historic house museum maintained by the Eames Foundation, it was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2006 and serves as a pilgrimage site for nearly 20,000 visitors a year.
Architects: Charles & Ray Eames
Joe C. Colombo, Charles Eames, Fritz Eichler, Verner Panton, Roger Tallon – qu'est ce que le design?, CCI Centre de Création Industrielle, Paris, 1969 [Saint-Martin Bookshop, Bruxelles-Brussel]
Animation detail from the computer information systems film, The Information Machine, directed by Charles & Ray Eames - 1959.