The Work of Charles & Ray Eames: A Legacy of Invention

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SCIENCE

The Eameses sought to foster universal understanding of socially beneficial science. To help people understand new technologies and their potential, they produced approximately sixty films, exhibitions, and books for such corporations as IBM, Boeing, Polaroid, and Westinghouse. Throughout their careers, the Eameses counted many scientists as colleagues and friends, joining their community as visual communicators.

A major theme in all the Eameses' scientific endeavors was the beauty and elegance of scientific principles and the tools used to study and convey them. Revealing science's complex integration of art, philosophy, and nature, the Eameses' films and exhibitions successfully related the unfamiliar aspects of science with familiar and comfortable facets of everyday life. These projects translated complex ideas into simple images to make them understandable to the lay person.

Wire chair
Production Art for Powers of Ten,
circa 1977, mixed-media panels
and reproductions.
Prints & Photographs Division (E-05)


Slides by the Eameses

Multi-screen slide shows were perhaps the Eameses most effective method for presenting everyday things in new ways and relationships. Encompassing an enormous breadth of subject matter, the slide shows were assembled for school courses and lectures as well as for corporate events. For these elaborate presentations, the Eameses drew upon their meticulously catalogued collection of approximately 350,000 slides: their very own "cabinet of curiosity."

Prints & Photographs Division (D-06)

Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides


Powers of Ten Correspondence Between Staff Member Alex Funke and Dr. Jean-Paul Revel
Powers of Ten
Correspondence
Between Staff Member Alex Funke
and Dr. Jean-Paul Revel,

July 22, 1977, photographic reproduction.
Manuscript Division (E-02)

Correspondence among the Eames Office and the nation's top scientists indicates both the high level of technical expertise within the office as well as the collaborative nature of their scientific endeavors.


Powers of Ten Storyboard Sketches
Powers of Ten
Storyboard Sketches,
circa 1977, pencil on paper.
Sketch #2 - Sketch #3 - Sketch #4
Prints & Photographs Division (E-01)

Mathematica Research Notes
Mathematica
Research Notes,
circa 1961, photographic reproduction.
Manuscript Division (E-07)

Charles (In Lift), Ray, and Staff Outside Their Office ...
Charles (In Lift), Ray, and Staff Outside
Their Office Filming the Picnic Scene
for the 1968 Version of Powers of Ten,

photograph.
Prints & Photographs Division (E-16)

Chart Plotting Sequences of Powers of Ten
Chart Plotting Sequences of
Powers of Ten
,

circa 1977, photographic reproduction.
Manuscript Division (E-03r)


Slides by the Eameses

Multi-screen slide shows were perhaps the Eameses most effective method for presenting everyday things in new ways and relationships. Encompassing an enormous breadth of subject matter, the slide shows were assembled for school courses and lectures as well as for corporate events. For these elaborate presentations, the Eameses drew upon their meticulously catalogued collection of approximately 350,000 slides: their very own "cabinet of curiosity."

Prints & Photographs Division (D-06)

Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides

The ultimate Eamesian expression of systems and connections, Powers of Ten explores the relative size of things from the microscopic to the cosmic. The 1977 film travels from an aerial view of a man in a Chicago park to the outer limits of the universe directly above him and back down into the microscopic world contained in the man's hand. Powers of Ten illustrates the universe as an arena of both continuity and change, of everyday picnics and cosmic mystery. The film also demonstrates the Eameses' ability to make science both fascinating and accessible.

Powers of Ten
Powers of Ten (100)

These elaborately conceived and executed panels were created by the Eames Office for Powers of Ten. Forty-two large square images that mark the powers of ten were used in the production of the film and later reproduced for the 1982 book, Powers of Ten: A Book About the Relative Size of Things in the Universe and the Effect of Adding Another Zero, written by Philip Morrison, Phylis Morrison, and the Office of Charles and Ray Eames.

Powers of Ten
Powers of Ten (101)

Powers of Ten
Powers of Ten (103)

Production Art for Powers of Ten, circa 1977, mixed-media panels and reproductions.
Prints & Photographs Division (E-05)

Powers of Ten
Powers of Ten (102)


Slides by the Eameses

Multi-screen slide shows were perhaps the Eameses most effective method for presenting everyday things in new ways and relationships. Encompassing an enormous breadth of subject matter, the slide shows were assembled for school courses and lectures as well as for corporate events. For these elaborate presentations, the Eameses drew upon their meticulously catalogued collection of approximately 350,000 slides: their very own "cabinet of curiosity."

Prints & Photographs Division (D-06)

Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides
Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides Eameses Travel Slides

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