History of ID Week 10 Part 1: Eva Zeisel, Russel Wright, Freda Diamond (and Isamu Noguchi)
Watch as a desperate teacher tries to convert a live classroom experience into an online learning opportunity. 2020 Covid-19 management strategy. If you are here for class, hope you enjoy this. If you are just finding it on your own, PLEASE be kind. This is intended to solve problems in a time of crisis. It should live in a land beyond the reach of petty criticisms of my voice or mistaken pronunciation or differing interpretations that fill up so many comment boxes. Available to all because we need to work together and share resources. Feel free to use or share if this is useful in your own problem solving.
Matthew Bird, Industrial Design, Rhode Island School of Design, April 26, 2020
Links:
Forgot to mention that you should watch this:
• Throwing Curves - Goin...
Пікірлер: 27
I fortunately stumbled across your channel. Thank you for producing a captivating, binge-worthy series. You're an excellent host and guide through an introspective tour through the design world.
Thank you so much for putting these lectures online. I'm not a design student, just a hobbyist woodworker who loves mid century design and stumbled on this channel. I'm now binge watching all of them!
The story about Isamu Noguchi volunteering to help in an internment camp and then winding up a full-on prisoner there is heart wrenching.
I strongly agree with the gentleman below (Keith). Thank you.
Enjoyed this tremendously! My aunt's every day dishes for her wedding in the early '50s were American Modern, and I have a large collection of place settings and serving pieces, plus the Wright's "Guide..." book, some spun aluminum pieces, and a tablecloth. Also met their daughter at a book signing in NJ many years ago. Best find: the aluminum bun warmer for 25 cents!! at the church thrift shop next to my home in PA.
@HistoryofID
4 жыл бұрын
Well done. 1000% profit on that score!
These videos should be on "Big TV".... really. Eva Zeisel! What a gal !!
M. Bird is the best! It's amazingly informative, yet entertains and best artist of presentation... THankyou
Your channel is amazing! ❤️❤️❤️🤩🤩🤩
Again thank you. Very interesting.
I'm binge watching this series like it's a new series of Stranger Things.
Thankyou for today's lesson!!!
great lecture, well done
I love the story about Freda Diamond, Paul Robeson, and Emma Goldman.
@HistoryofID
2 жыл бұрын
Yes we NEED a big Hollywood movie about it!!!!!
Thanks. I will know what I found in the thrift shops, now, if I am lucky.
So I am on my 2nd time watching your wonderful classes and this time I noticed that I have a Russell Wright Iroquois teapot! It is a repro made by Oneida, but, that design! Probably got at Goodwill...(:
Thank YOU very much 😁
Who makes your eyeglass frames? (And that Roll Easy vacuum is beautiful!)
@HistoryofID
3 жыл бұрын
They are just inexpensive reading glasses from readers.com. No big secret.....
OK, I cheated. My 85 yr. old brain couldn't keep up with your words. But I certainly thank you for some beautiful visuals, one being 'Tulip' chair and all Russell Wright pics!!!!! NM USA Also, someone said, " there's no such thing as original art". So it's interesting watching these folks evolving from each other.
The interview you are looking for is part of the documentary "Throwing Curves" (yes, someone made a film about Eva) Jyll Johnstone, Canobie Films. I recommend it.
@kebid
3 жыл бұрын
... oh, and by the way, the first time I talked to her, I got politely advised by Eva that she makes it a point to "NEVER talk to anyone who uses the word 'STILL'." I was inviting her out to speak at ArtCenter and I assured her that she would never again hear me say that she was "still" working. I have many stories about what I learned at her knee.
@HistoryofID
3 жыл бұрын
THANK YOU!!!!! Mystery solved!!!!
@kebid
3 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryofID Years ago I walked into Vidiots, a West LA landmark rental place for obscure and wonderful films, and babbled at the counter guy that I was looking for a "documentary, can't remember the name, could have been PBS, and it covered Robert Moses, and I can't find it!" Without missing a beat or looking at any sort of catalogue, he said, "Why, that's volume 8 of Ric Burns' series on New York." Coulda kissed him. It's an excellent series, by the way.
This is fucking amazing
there is nothing unprofessional about gossip, it's like adding lace to a plain dress