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Showing posts with label Textiles and Objects. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Textiles and Objects. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Marilyn Neuhart's T&O dolls

Marilyn Neuhart
The Albuquerque, New Mexico, store máXimo has reintroduced hand-made dolls created by Marilyn Neuhart, a designer and writer who worked closely with Alexander Girard and Charles and Ray Eames. (See older post about Neuhart's latest book, The Story of Eames Furniture.) The folk art style dolls were originally sold at Girard's Textiles & Objects Shop in New York City in the early 1960s. New printed dolls sell for $100, new embroidered dolls for $800 and vintage embroidered dolls for $1200 and up.

Marilyn Neuhart was born in Long Beach, California, and attended Long Beach public schools, Long Beach City College and UCLA. She has been a freelance designer in the Los Angeles area since her graduation from the university. She has taught design, painting and color theory at UCLA and UCLA Extension and at East Los Angeles Junior College. She and her husband John have worked together professionally since their marriage and have collaborated on numerous design projects, including graphics, films and exhibitions. From 1980 to 1998 they were partners in the design firm Neuhart Donges Neuhart, whose clients included the IBM Corporation, Herman Miller, Inc., The Huntington Library and Art Gallery, the Doheny Library, the J. Paul Getty Museum, the Government of Taiwan and local businesses and institutions. The Neuharts continue to work together in their office in El Segundo.

Neuhart says about her sewing:

I started to quilt when I was a small child sitting with my mother and my aunts over a quilting frame. I continued to sew, albeit intermittently, as I went through high school and college. After I left teaching for a period and with two small children, I became a fulltime freelance graphic designer and once again took up my needle in earnest. After making small cloth dolls for my children and friends, I made a doll for designer Alexander Girard, who asked me to make a large number of them the new Textiles & Objects shop he was designing in New York City for the Herman Miller Furniture Company. Over the next few years (in the early 1960's), I made nearly 2,000 dolls for the shop and for Girard's exhibition projects. And I am still sewing and quilting. 

Text and images from maximodesign.com 

New printed Benny Casa
New Billy Cat
New Angel Geneva
New Mermaid Meryl
Vintage stripe
Vintage jester
Vintage centaur

Monday, October 10, 2011

Alexander Girard

Alexander "Sandro" Girard (1907-1993) was an architect and textile designer born in New York City and raised in Florence, Italy. He studied at the Royal Institute of British Architects in London and at the Royal School of Architecture in Rome but came back to the United States to live and work.

In 1932 he opened his first architectural and interior design office in New York City. In 1937 he moved to Detroit and opened an office there. In 1949 he put together the "For Modern Living" show at the Detroit Institute of Arts.

In 1952 he was recruited by Charles Eames to be the director of design for the Herman Miller textile division. He held that position till 1973, during which time he created over 300 fabric and wallpaper designs.

In 1959 Girard designed the interior for the La Fonda del Sol restaurant in New York City's Time Life Building. The design featured dozens of stylized sun faces in vibrant colors, on everything from menus to tablecloths to the paper wrappers for the sugar cubes. Recently, Flor, manufacturer of modular floor coverings, released a collection featuring Girard's colorful suns.

In 1961 he opened the Textiles & Objects store in New York City. The store sold folk art that Girard had brought back from his travels around the world, as well as products made from his textiles and small furniture made by other Herman Miller designers. (Post to come about T&O dolls by Marilyn Neuhart.)

Girard was hired in 1965 to create a new corporate brand for Braniff Airlines, a project which consisted of 17,543 modifications, including changes to plane interiors, logos, stationery, condiment packages, dishes, blankets and playing cards. In 1967 Herman Miller released a small line of seating based on Girard's work for Braniff.

In the early 1960s Girard and his wife Susan moved to New Mexico, where they built one of the world's largest collections of folk art. Today the collection of over 100,000 pieces can be found in the Girard Wing of the Museum of International Folk Art in Santa Fe.

From hermanmiller.com, dwr.com, braniffpages.com, nytimes.com


Coffee table for Knoll
selectism.com

Quatrefoil fabric
jandofabrics.com

La Fonda chair
sfmoma.org

Girard suns
nytimes.com

Braniff sofa
dailyicon.com

Braniff chairs
wilsonart.com

Braniff dove pin
braniffpages.com

Braniff playing card
designinspiration.net

Braniff planes in Girard colors
blog.smow.com

Braniff airplane interior and sugar packet
pichaus.com

Side table
architonic.com

Coffee table
downtown.1stdibs.com