Eames: The Architect and the Painter

Eames: The Architect and the Painter
Directed by Jason Cohn
Bill Jersey
Produced by Jason Cohn
Bill Jersey
Written by Jason Cohn
Narrated by James Franco
Production
company
Quest Productions
Bread & Butter Films
American Masters Productions
Distributed by First Run Features
Release dates
  • November 18, 2011 (2011-11-18)
Running time
84 minutes
Country United States
Language English

Eames: The Architect and the Painter is a 2011 documentary film about American designers Charles and Ray Eames and the Eames Office. It was produced and written by Jason Cohn, and coproduced by Bill Jersey.

The film moves between a narrative about the husband and wife team to one about the Eames Office and its accomplishments, starting with chair design, but also moving through architecture, photography and film. Most of the period images are still photographs from the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, but there are several film clips. Audio clips are interspersed with narration by James Franco.

The film uses extensive interviews to frame the story. There are eight subjects, including Richard Saul Wurman, the founder of TED, Irish architect Kevin Roche, and screenwriter Paul Schrader; Lucia Eames and Eames Demetrios, Charles Eames' daughter and grandson; and three former Eames office designers: Jeannine Oppewall, Gordon Ashby, and Deborah Sussman.

Reception

The New York Times reviewer A. O. Scott called it "a lively new documentary" and "appropriately busy and abundant: full of objects, information, stories and people, organized with hectic elegance."[1] He praised it for showing, "in marvelous detail, how their work was an extension of themselves and how their distinct personalities melded into a unique and protean force."[1]

Tom Keogh of the Seattle Times wrote that "Much like the creations of its subjects, 'Eames' is itself a dazzling, sensory adventure" and that "the film is an extraordinary and enjoyable history of how two people influenced so much of our thinking and surroundings today."[2]

Los Angeles Times critic Kenneth Turan described the film as "a thorough and vibrant examination of the master Modernists."[3]

Awards

The film won a Peabody Award in 2012.[4]

Home media

The film is available on YouTube from PBS as Cd1[5] and Cd2.[6]

The film is available on DVD.[7]

References

External links

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