UPHOLSTERED EAMES ROCKING CHAIR (RARE) d. 1950

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A dark blue fiberglass rocking chair (RAR) designed in 1950 by Charles and Ray Eames for the Herman Miller Furniture Company of Zeeland, Michigan.  IThe fiberglass shell is upholstered in blue Naugahyde with an orange trim, and dates to the 1960s.  The rocker's wire base is a newer Herman Miller replacement that is clad in black with walnut struts.

CHARLES & RAY EAMES were an American married team of industrial designers whose creativity and drive helped to shape America's 20th century.  Their lives and work represented many of the most defining developments of the period:  the West Coast's coming-of-age, the shift from making goods to producing information, the global reach of American culture.  The Eameses saw modern design as an agent of social change; their evolution from furniture designers to cultural ambassadors speaks not only to their boundless talent but also to an overlap between their interests and the national agenda.  In a time of uniquely shared objectives, they partnered with the federal government and top businesses to lead the charge to modernize post-war America.  (No need to belabor the well-recorded story of their enduring contribution.  Suffice it to say that American mid-century design would not have been what it was without their tremendous gifts.)

The Eames' relationship with manufacturer HERMAN MILLER began in the late '40s and went on to become perhaps the most legendary collaborative effort ever known in the modern furniture industry, as the sheer wealth of their design output attests.

HERMAN MILLER was founded in 1905 as the Star Furniture Co. in Zeeland, a town in western Michigan near Grand Rapids.  Zeeland had been settled primarily by Dutch immigrants, many of whom handed down a legacy of skill in crafting fine furniture.  By 1900, Grand Rapids and its environs had become a hub for furniture production.  In 1919, Dirk Jan ("DJ") De Pree, originally hired by Star as a clerk, became its president, and it was renamed the Michigan Star Furniture Co.  De Pree and his father-in-law, Herman Miller, along with a small group of local businessmen, purchased 51% of the company stock in 1923 and renamed it HERMAN MILLER.

The company had historically been a manufacturer of high-end, traditional style home furnishings, modifications of European designs.  With the coming of the Great Depression, De Pree was forced to consider new products to survive in a shrinking market.  In 1931 he was approached by the industrial designer Gilbert Rohde, who reportedly entered the showroom unannounced.  De Pree listened to Rohde's ideas and, attracted by his straightforward approach, hired him to design a new line of furniture for HERMAN MILLER.  Rohde speculated that the decreasing size of modern homes would inspire a demand for a smaller, simpler, and lighter furniture style that De Pree referred to as "more honest" than that of traditional pieces.  So began the transformation of HERMAN MILLER from a producer of historical furniture designs to the modern furniture juggernaut they would become.

HERMAN MILLER debuted its new line of modern furniture at the Century of Progress exposition in Chicago.  In 1941, the company opened a showrooms in Chicago and New York City.  Under Rohde's supervision HERMAN MILLER entered the office furniture market in 1942 with the introduction of the modular 'Executive Office Group' (EOG).  Rohde died in 1944 and was replaced by architect George Nelson, who joined the firm as its director of design in 1945.  Nelson was to have an enormous influence upon HERMAN MILLER, not only for his personal design contributions, but also for the talented designers he recruited to its ranks, including; Isamu Noguchi, Charles and Ray Eames, Robert Propst, and textile designer Alexander Girard.  HERMAN MILLER incorporated in 1960 and is in business to this day as one of the top producers of office furniture in the world.

Who ever said that pleasure wasn't functional? – CHARLES & RAY EAMES

Designer Charles & Ray Eames
Manufacturer Herman Miller
Design Period 1950 to 1959
Production Period 1960 to 1969
Country of Manufacture United States
Identifying Marks This piece has an attribution mark
Style Vintage, Mid-Century, Design Classics, Modernist
Detailed Condition Excellent — This vintage piece is in near original condition. It may show minimal traces of use and/or have slight restorations.
Product Code
Materials Fiberglass, Naugahyde, Metal, Birch
Color Navy blue, royal blue, orange, black, brown
Width 24.8 inch
Depth 27.0 inch
Height 26.5 inch
Seat Height 16.0 inch
Quantity Available – 0