In:
Theory, Culture & Society, SAGE Publications, Vol. 37, No. 7-8 ( 2020-12), p. 71-94
Kurzfassung:
The design office of Charles and Ray Eames was a collaborative, interdisciplinary, multimedia affair linking Hollywood, the State Department, universities, the corporate sector and international fairs during the height of the Cold War. Bringing together design, furniture, cutting-edge technology and experimental, avant-garde informed-multiscreen projections, the Eames Office operated as a humanities/IT/media/arts lab. For the 1964 World’s Fair, the Eameses created ‘The Information Machine’ for IBM. The techniques of display and experimental juxtaposition of images, sound and new media capacities later migrated to the many ‘happenings’ following in the wake of Allan Kaprow’s medial and performative experiments. The Eames Office crafted for the 1964 World’s Fair a vision of global change and possibility grounded in avant-garde visual techniques and aesthetics that continue to constitute a specific globe crafted by the US Cold War military-industrial-university-entertainment complex that remains the grounds for our current collective nomos.
Materialart:
Online-Ressource
ISSN:
0263-2764
,
1460-3616
DOI:
10.1177/0263276420958041
Sprache:
Englisch
Verlag:
SAGE Publications
Publikationsdatum:
2020
ZDB Id:
1490738-0
ZDB Id:
803302-X
SSG:
3,4
SSG:
10