Everything Connects at the Eames Office
How a small studio in a converted Venice Beach car garage run by a husband-and-wife duo created a new paradigm for creative culture worldwide.
In 1964, the World’s Fair came to Flushing Meadows Park in Queens, New York. Spread over 646 acres, 140 pavilions, 45 corporate exhibitions and 110 restaurants, the spectacle presented 51 million attendees with a vision of the future turbocharged by American culture and technology. The theme was “Peace Through Understanding,” dedicated to “Man’s Achievement on a Shrinking Globe.” The 140-foot-high Unisphere, a stainless steel globe which recognized the inauguration of the Space Age and was the fair’s centerpiece, still stands in Queens today. IBM’s pavilion stood out as a futurist triumph. Its signage, information panels and corporate icons were wreathed in illustrations of doves, cherubim and baroque floral arrangements. Beneath a grove of steel trees, interactive exhibits sought to demystify the increasing presence of computers in everyday life.