Martin is currently living as an illustrator in Berlin. Man is the central element of Martin Haake’s collages. The human being shapes and forms the narrative and the relationships within it. Haake studied in Berlin and works as a freelance illustrator in London, Hamburg, and Berlin. His works have been showcased within various European exhibitions.After a phase in which he mainly produced drawings and paintings, he soon devoted his talent entirely to classic hand-made collage. His method of work is distinguished by his intuitive approach. Either he starts with a basic idea which then inspires he search for applicable graphic material, or he utilises a material, which lends itself to the birth of a concept. Haake’s repertoires often play on funny fragments of pop-culture, technology, or everyday life.
His figures are trimmed, masked, and displaced within a recently abstracted background. Critical still are his proportional contrasts and improbabilities, for example a gaping red mouth depicted floating next to a proportionally smaller head. Haake’s method never fails to entice references to a generation of insecurity, nudging the imaginations of his audience into an artistic parallel universe.
Charles Eames (1907-78) and Ray Eames (1912-88) gave shape to America's twentieth century. Their lives and work represented the nation's defining movements: the West Coast's coming-of-age, the economy's shift from making goods to producing information, and the global expansion of American culture. The Eameses embraced the era's visionary concept of modern design as an agent of social change, elevating it to a national agenda. Their evolution from furniture designers to cultural ambassadors demonstrated their boundless talents and the overlap of their interests with those of their country. Not only did CHARLES & RAY design some of the most important examples of 20th century furniture, they also applied their talents to devising ingenious children's toys, puzzles, films, exhibitions and such iconic mid-20th century Los Angeles buildings as the Eames House and Entenza House in Pacific Palisades. In a rare era of shared objectives, the Eameses partnered with the federal government and the country's top businesses to lead the charge to modernize postwar America.
Eames working his solor powered design display
Textile by Ray
ABOUT
Charles Eames, born 1907 in St. Louis, Missouri, studied architecture at Washington Universityin St. Louis and opened his own office together with Charles M. Gray in 1930. In 1935 he founded another architectural firm with Robert T. Walsh. After receiving a fellowship in 1938 from the Cranbrook Academy of Art, he moved to Michigan and assumed a teaching position in the design department the following year. In 1940, he and Eero Saarinen won first prize for their joint entry in the competition "Organic Design in Home Furnishings" organized by the New YorkMuseum of Modern Art. During the same year, Eames became head of the department of industrial design at Cranbrook, and in 1941 he married Ray Kaiser.
Steinberg's drawing on Eames chair @ the Eames studio