Showing posts with label California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

The Eames House


The Eames House
203 N. Chautauqua Blvd.
Pacific Palisades, California



We are huge fans of Charles and Ray Eames, known for their innovative furniture, as well as their contributions to architecture, film and graphic design. We actually have several of their pieces in our own home. That is why we would love to make a little trip to LA right now and visit the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and its show called “California Design, 1930-1965: Living in a Modern Way,” (runs through March 25). In fact, the Eames House's living room  — all 1,869 items — have been meticulously cataloged and transferred to a replica of the room installed at the museum for the show. To pack up the living room took a week with the aid of two teams, then all the items went into a freezer for five days to kill any possible insect infestations.

Anyways, for all the Eames lovers out there, the Eames House, Case Study House #8, was one of roughly two dozen homes built as part of The Case Study House Program. Begun in the mid-1940s and continuing through the early 1960s, the program was spearheaded by John Entenza, the publisher of Arts and Architecture magazine. The magazine announced that it would be the client for a series of homes designed to express man's life in the modern world. These homes were to be built and furnished using materials and techniques derived from the experiences of the Second World War. Each home would be for a real or hypothetical client taking into consideration their particular housing needs. Charles and Ray proposed that the home they designed would be for a married couple working in design and graphic arts, whose children were no longer living at home. Charles and Ray moved into the House on Christmas Eve, 1949, and lived there for the rest of their lives until their death, his in 1978 and hers 10 years to the day later. They furnished it in a way that mirrored their energetic personalities and curiosity about the world. Strikingly, the 17-foot-high living room was not at all an example of modern design, but instead a comfortable lived-in place. The house is now maintained by the Eames Foundation, set up by Lucia Eames, Mr. Eames’s daughter from his first marriage, and her children. While the family still uses it occasionally, it is a kind of time capsule that shows how the couple lived.
 
Go to http://eamesfoundation.org/ for more information about the house. You can actually hold a wedding or party in the House's meadow, or even spend a night in the Studio where daughter Lucia stayed when she came on visits. That must be a very special experience!


Tuesday, August 23, 2011

Malibu Dream Home: The Segel Residence

22426 Pacific Coast Highway, Malibu CA

The Segel Residence
A few years ago, while walking on Malibu beach, we discovered a very special house, maybe one of the most interesting homes we have ever seen. We were curious to know who was leaving there and thought of the great life these people must have, waking up every day facing the Pacific ocean and being able to walk on the beach any time of the day. "These people" were actually Courtney Cox and David Arquette. And the special house was designed by a pupil of Frank Lloyd Wright. After doing some research to learn more about it, this is what we found: 

The Segel Residence, sold by Courtney Cox and David Arquette in 2007 to Dodgers owners Frank and Jamie McCourt for 33.5 Million dollars (it is believed Cox and Arquette originally purchased the home for $10 million in 2001), is a stunning home built in 1979 by John Lautner, a famed architect who studied with Frank Lloyd Wright. It is on Carbon Beach, and is considered one of the most beautiful homes on the Malibu coastline. The four-bedroom, 5,500 square foot house has ocean views from almost every room and sits on a double lot with 80 feet of beach frontage.

If you are in the neighborhood, we strongly recommend that you stop by Paradise Cove for brunch or lunch and then start a digestive walk  on the beach where you'll be able to see this beautiful house as well as many others!




The living room