There are brands—and then there are legacy brands. The latter exist in
rarified air—fueled by pure life force, sprung fully formed from personalities
and achievements. The relationship between the Eames estate and
two companies—Herman Miller and Neenah Paper—illustrates how,
with proper care, evolving a legacy brand can be mutually satisfying, comprehensively
rewarding and nothing short of a calling.
CHARLES AND RAY EAMES AT AN ASPEN DESIGN CONFERENCE
Capturing the spirit and vision of artists/entrepreneurs Charles
and Ray Eames is akin to grasping white-hot sparks. During their
lives, which ended on Aug. 21, 1978, and Aug. 21, 1988, respectively,
the Eameses impacted the global design community and mainstream
culture with significant, award-winning contributions in
architecture, film, furniture design and exhibitions.
The Eames Lounge Chair remains an icon of mid-century
design, and was followed by three equally well-regarded generations
of chairs. Eames tandem airport seating, fashioned out of
their signature cast aluminum, is found all over the world. The
Eames body of 154 movies—notably Powers of Ten—gave them
another forum to express their ideas. Museums display their collections,
and whole rooms from their former studio in Venice, Calif., are on display in three institutions.
The Eameses’ work includes a collection of over 750,000 still
photographs, slides and drawings at the Library of Congress in
the Prints and Photographs Division, along with 160,000 items
in the Manuscript Division. Further, the tentacles of their influence
reached toys, clothing, magazine design, common household
items, musical instruments, office accessories, fabric design
and more. Charles, trained as an architect, and Ray, primarily a
painter, lived to experience their work in myriad arenas.
EVERYTHING IS CONNECTED
Yet the husband-and-wife team’s singular approach to living their
design is what really stands out. Each area of modern life they
touched—no matter how far afield—was infused with the same
philosophy, rooted in an unwavering belief: Everything is connected,
from the tiniest line of a pencil marking to the biggest
splash of ocean to a falling star. Charles would say, “Eventually
everything connects—people, ideas, objects, etc. … the quality of
the connections is the key to quality per se.”
The “quality of the connections” is, of course, at the forefront
of furthering a legacy. At Neenah Paper, which has produced
Eames products since 2005, and Herman Miller, which has had
an Eames business link since 1946, solid relationships were knit
together before a single product hit the marketplace. It’s a matter
of doing the homework—designer learning about manufacturer,
manufacturer immersing itself in a designer’s DNA.
In the case of Herman Miller, key individuals were lucky
enough to spend countless hours with Charles and Ray. At
Neenah, although the relationship began after the designers’
deaths, one has the distinct feeling that Charles and Ray would
have felt the work was authentic, inspired and true to their playful
vision.
John Berry, former Herman Miller director of Corporate
Communications, worked closely with Ray Eames in the 1980s.
“Trust was and always has been the hallmark of the Eames/Herman
Miller relationship,” he says. “The Eameses trusted Herman
Miller early on to make what they designed. They trusted Herman
Miller engineers and model makers to collaborate with them
on how an idea would go into production. The Eameses didn’t just
design something and say, ‘Now make this.’ They understood the
manufacturing process and worked within it.”
A SINGULAR COUPLE
It’s hard to avoid the romantic and even sappy when discussing
the Eameses. They met in 1940 at the Cranbrook Academy of Art
in Cranbrook, Mich., where Charles was on the faculty—about to
become head of the Industrial Design Department—and Ray Kaiser
was a new student. Within a year, the discreet pair was quite
possibly the coolest design team around … and in many ways, they
still are. Today, they would be highly sought-after (if reluctant)
A-listers to secure as party guests. Their level of taste, combined
with their impeccable sense of social and environmental responsibility,
would be in high demand in think tanks and academia.
PLYWOOD EAMES CHAIRS
However, Charles and Ray would most likely not have attended
the parties and would have declined self-important corporate roles.
As grandson Eames Demetrios, a filmmaker and author, writes in
An Eames Primer, “Charles and Ray had an expression they used
around the office that encapsulated this: ‘Take your pleasure seriously.’
It was also an ideal that they truly lived, one that manifested
itself in a million ways in their lives and work … [staffer] Parke
Meek commented about the connection between work and play
for Charles, ‘You know, it was the fact that he just kept hammering
away … he very seldom did anything for entertainment. Other than
play, he made the work, sort of, a play thing.’”
THE EAMES HOUSE & OFFICE
Part of the Case Study House Program of 1945–1966, the Eames
House is situated on the perimeter of a wildly natural meadow
perched on a cliff overlooking the Pacific Ocean in Pacific Palisades,
Calif. Designed by Charles and Ray, the residence is a striking
example of their architectural vision.
Said to be Japanese in influence, the house is a repeating pattern
of a box, consisting of Mondrian-style colorful cubes.
Divided in two—one pavilion is living space, the other side a studio
—the structure was originally to be built across the meadow,
cutting the grounds in half in a bridge layout, affording its occupants
an ocean view. But Charles and Ray decided the natural
beauty of the meadow, lined with fragrant eucalyptus trees,
should not be disturbed. They set the home at the very edge of
the property, against a descending wall of rock, so it gently overlooks
the meadow grasses.
Unchanged since Ray’s death, the Eames House serves as a
window to the artists’ sensibilities. An unwrapped present lies in
a hallway—Ray would regularly find the paper and ribbon dressings
of presents too striking to open. A small kitchen table is set as
a tableau of blue pottery: small, delicate sculptures and three small
vases with fresh flowers. In the living room, a cozy seating nook is
brimming with objets d’art from all over the world.
On the studio side, books, drawings, framed pictures, toys and
countless artifacts of their work lives are spread among spacious
work tables. The Eameses were archaeologists of aesthetics, digging
up shapes, colors, objects and found items everywhere and
anywhere. In effect, the Eames House and Studio are like a design
world expo exhibit.
Steve Sikora, cofounder of Design Guys in Minneapolis,
worked with Neenah Paper to create EAMES paper lines and promotional
materials. “The Eameses allowed [designer] Kelly Munsen
and myself to wander through the Eames House at will and
discover what was there,” Sikora remembers. “Unlike any preservation
effort I have seen, the Eames House is managed as a
time capsule. We found personal notes, paper scraps and handmade
artifacts and collections that later informed the papers and
graphic design of [Neenah’s] entire program. Allowing us freedom
in the house was a risk at some level; however, it provided the intimacy
required for us to make the program truly authentic.”
MUSICAL EAMES CHAIRS
On a Sunday afternoon in June 2007, on a cliff overlooking the ocean, a charming game of musical chairs was played out in a rambling, pastoral meadow on the
Southern California coastline. Surrounded by eucalyptus trees and washed with a sweeping view of blue water and sky, it was a scene out of a Peter Weir movie.
Grown-ups of all shapes, sizes and ages—and two little girls—vied for coveted spots as Dixieland music blasted from a boom box.
The setting was the home and grounds of the late Charles and Ray Eames—and this was an annual game of musical Eames chairs. Formed in the signature molded
plastic shape made famous decades ago, saturated colors of tobacco, celery, putty, coral, khaki and tangerine created a sensual line of contrast against the wildly
natural green and gray meadowland. As the players elbowed one another for position, slipped on the grass and laughed as they hit the ground, one could just imagine
that the Eameses would have enjoyed the playtime.
Each year on June 20—Charles’ and Ray’s wedding anniversary—the Eames Foundation hosts a party at the Eames House to thank supporters. On this particular
day, June 17, it was the 100th anniversary of Charles’ birthday. Along with the usual festivities, a formal presentation by the National Park Service announced
the designation of the home as a historical landmark.
Charles’ only child, daughter Lucia, was away at college when
the Eameses lived at the house. She recalls many wonderful visits
with her father and stepmother: “Ray would always say, ‘Bring joy
and vigor to whatever you do.’ We would have great family meals
here in the kitchen or down at the beach, and afterward, Charles
would say, ‘It’s back to the mines.’ And he would walk across the
house to the studio to continue working into the night.”
Today, the Eames House is available for exterior viewing by
appointment. The Eames Office in Santa Monica, Calif.—a gallery,
gathering place, workspace and library—is open to the public.
GUEST/HOST RELATIONSHIP
In addition to the idea of connection, a guiding theme throughout
the Eameses’ lives was the concept of guest and host. In
designing a chair, for example, it was just as important to them
to consider who will be sitting in it as it was to decide what kind
of material to use. Their notion was that if both sides are considered,
the product or environment will automatically improve. A
perfect illustration of the guest/host relationship can be found in
the siting of the Eames House: Charles and Ray were being good
guests by not building on the meadow. This decision also made
them good hosts for their surroundings.
Like a good partner in a guest/host relationship, Neenah
required Demetrios to learn about the paper business. “They said
I had to take a crash course in papermaking,” he remembers, “so
off I went to Wisconsin in the middle of winter to visit one of
Neenah’s paper mills. I asked to see some of their technical paper.
It made perfect sense because Charles and Ray would take industrial
things and make them into something else.”
Demetrios says, “Charles and Ray were always asking, ‘What
would happen if mass production was actually good for the product?’
So as you work on mass production, you make it better and
better. Charles and Ray were interested in getting things out
to lots of people. We want each new [corporate] partnership to
reach new people.”
Demetrios runs the Eames Office and is also the family spokesperson
for the Eames legacy. Four siblings—Carla, Byron, Lucia
and Llisa—oversee other aspects of the family business, from
archival supervision to maintaining and curating the house and
grounds. The family is approached often to partner with companies.
“We get lots of serious queries for some kind of product
somewhere; most of them go away when we say we want creative
control,” Demetrios explains. “We know what we want, which is
to feel really good about whatever has our name on it.”
NEENAH PAPER: EVERY DAY, ALL ABOUT EAMES
In 2005 Neenah Paper released its EAMES Paper Collection—the
result of an exhaustive, exhilarating immersion into the world of
Charles and Ray Eames. Tom Wright, Neenah’s director of Design
and Advertising, says, “We had great brands behind us at Neenah,
but nothing had been done that recently. Here, we had the opportunity
to do something great.”
“A former boss, John Berry, arranged a meeting between Eames
Demetrios and me at the AIGA conference in 2002.” Wright, who
had worked extensively in environmental and graphic design and
holds a visual communications degree, already had an affinity for
the Eames aesthetic going into the project. He actually owns an
Eames chair, a surprise from his wife years earlier.
Before the meeting, Wright attended a presentation Demetrios
was giving on the family legacy. “Eames came in and began
this multimedia show about Charles and Ray,” Wright remembers,
“and off we went on this wonderful little journey. Hours later,
I was still sitting in this little room with others in the audience,
and not one person had moved. I realized right then and there that
this was going to work.”
Once an agreement was forged, Wright connected Design
Guys with Demetrios, who served as their guide. “We like to find
out who’s going to be involved in the creative process, and we want
them to know us, too,” says Demetrios. “We bring them to the
Eames House, the Eames Office and occasionally to the Library of
Congress. The ideal is for all of us to be on the same page.”
The EAMES Collection became an homage to Charles and
Ray, re. ecting their disciplines and passions. Centered around the
themes of furniture, architecture and painting, the papers offer
colors, textures and finishes that are beautiful and refined. But a
funny thing happened: Early sales suggested the papers might be
too refined. Wright explains, “Designers held the collection in
such high esteem that they were reserving it for special projects.”
The Eameses would have had a laugh, since their entire thrust
was to reach as many people as possible. Demetrios adds, “When
we say that the EAMES Paper Collection is ‘inspired’ by my grandparents’
philosophy and work, this means more than a casual nod
to Eamesian things such as furniture, painting and architecture.
It means authenticity, utility, beauty and accessibility. Charles and
Ray designed for everyone, not merely the high-end user.”
Neenah, Demetrios and Design Guys regrouped, and the result
was the EAMES Everyday Collection. Building on the original collection,
they added colors, weights and finishes that round out the
line. The process and results have been successful at every stage.
Wright says, “Eames [Demetrios] keeps the legacy authentic.
He lives the heritage. There was good dialogue throughout the
process. We did have arguments, but he always came back with a
good reason why something could or could not live in this space.”
THE HERMAN MILLER DECADES
When Charles and Ray began working with Herman Miller, at
first their deal was only in marketing and distribution. After a couple
of years Herman Miller began to manufacture Eames chairs as
well. Herman Miller and Eames are an example of a legacy partnership
so intertwined it is hard to separate the two. Each famous
design—from the 1956 lounge chair and ottoman to the Eames
Aluminum Group—has solidified a relationship that is still going
strong. Herman Miller is the only American manufacturer to
build Eames furniture.
NEENAH PAPER’S EAMES PAPER COLLECTION COMMUNICATION PIECES BY DESIGN
GUYS: SECOND FOLD, SWATCHBOOK
The partners worked together in architecture, too. Charles
would design Herman Miller showrooms—one, on Beverly Boulevard
in L.A., has been gutted and redone several times, but its
facade remains the same. In 1954 Charles designed the family
home for Max DePree, son of the founder of Herman Miller.
Michael Arents, Herman Miller Retail Sales manager, speaks
about the famed synergy between the partners. “There’s a shared
reverence for the genius of the Eameses, and, on Herman Miller’s
side, [founder] D.J. DePree and [designer] George Nelson,
who recognized their abilities and fostered a relationship that supported
and empowered their work.”
In the end, it seems that advocacy for authenticity is another
key to a successful legacy partnership. In the case of Charles and
Ray Eames, the fact that their legacy includes a brilliant, thriving
family of individuals hell-bent on preserving their philosophies
and spirit is fortunate for all of us.
As a child, Lucia Eames asked her father, “What is immortality?
How long does a spirit last?” Charles responded, “As long as
there’s a thought about that spirit—as long as someone’s thinking
about that spirit—that’s how long we last.”
TOP: INTERIOR, EAMES HOUSE AND OFFICE. COMMON
LIVING AREA/LIVING ROOM FEATURING
MODULAR WALLS. CHARLES’ AND RAY’S
ART AND ARTIFACT COLLECTIONS CAN BE
SEEN THROUGHOUT THE SPACE.