Eames Obsessives Have New Mecca to Explore

With Ray and Charles’ granddaughter at the helm, a new nonprofit organization aims to inspire today’s creative thinkers with a never-before-seen design archive.

Eames Obsessives Have New Mecca to Explore

With Ray and Charles’ granddaughter at the helm, a new nonprofit organization aims to inspire today’s creative thinkers with a never-before-seen design archive.

Titans in the history of American design, Ray and Charles Eames taught us that "everything eventually connects." Their pragmatic view of design—Charles called it "a plan for arranging elements to accomplish a particular purpose" in the short 1972 film Design Q&A—and relentless curiosity produced a prolific body of work spanning not just furniture and architecture, but also medical equipment, films, graphics, textiles, and exhibits. Core to the couple’s genius was their ability to find connection and order through play and experimentation. In the same interview mentioned above, Charles refuses to separate utility and enjoyment: "Who would say that pleasure is not useful?"

The Eames Institute headquarters are at the Eames Ranch in Petaluma, California, where some of the rooms in the barn-like complex showcase the designers’ iconic furniture designs.

The Eames Institute headquarters are at the Eames Ranch in Petaluma, California, where some of the rooms in the barn-like home and studio complex showcase the designers’ iconic furniture designs.

Courtesy of the Eames Institute

Examples of Ray and Charles’ work, ranging from sketches and furniture, to graphics and film slides, grace the Eames Ranch.

Examples of Ray and Charles’ work, ranging from sketches and furniture, to graphics and film slides, grace the Eames Ranch.

Courtesy of the Eames Institute

It’s fitting, then, that the new nonprofit organization formed by their granddaughter, Llisa Demetrios, is named the Eames Institute of Infinite Curiosity. Led by chief curator Demetrios and president and CEO John Cary, the Institute hopes to equip today’s designers and leaders with the tools to tackle contemporary problems by bringing to life an expansive archive of Eames ephemera that the family acquired from the designers’ legendary office in Venice, California, in 2019.

The Eames Collection contains tens of thousands of objects, from handmade prototypes to toy tin cars, and swatches of marbled paper to watch faces. Each object will be meticulously catalogued, documented, restored, and made available to the public for the first time, in the hopes that they will spark new connections and discoveries that recall Ray and Charles’ own exploratory process.

Industrial designer and cofounder of Airbnb, Joe Gebbia, provided seed funding for the Institute, which launched this spring. A long-time Eames enthusiast, he had gotten to know the family through visits to the Eames Ranch in Petaluma, California, a working farm purchased by Lucia Eames, Charles’ daughter and Demetrio’s mother, in 1992. That year, Lucia commissioned William Turnbull, one of the architects who envisioned the Sea Ranch—a master-planned community on the coast in Sonoma County—to build a barn-inspired home and workshop. Here, on the land’s rolling green pastures, is where Demetrios grew up and subsequently raised her two sons. Now undergoing renovations to achieve net-zero carbon and water use, the Eames Ranch continues to serve as a "living laboratory," in the words of the Institute, which operates out of the compound. 

Talks of forming the Institute first began when Lucia died in 2014. Gebbia, who had also brought Airbnb designers to the Ranch for inspiration, was determined to help continue its legacy. "After many conversations with the family, where we built a strong and trusting relationship, the idea of the Eames Institute—a destination to inspire and unite individuals and organizations advancing design with purpose, stewarded by their granddaughter Llisa—was born," he writes in a blog post for the Institute.

Llisa Demetrios, chief curator and the granddaughter of Ray and Charles, arranges family memorabilia on display at a dining table.

Llisa Demetrios, chief curator and the granddaughter of Ray and Charles, arranges family memorabilia on display at a dining table. 

Courtesy of the Eames Institute

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