The New Creativity: Man and Machines - Architects & Artists at the MAK Center
- nmipublications
- Jun 26, 2015
- 2 min read

Some architects, like Charles Eames, celebrated the democratization of creativity, while others, like Paul Rudolph, hid his use of the Xerox machine to generate his famously detailed drawings behind overlays of delicate tracing paper.
While all forms of art making have been radically transformed by the advent of digital technologies, spaces of creative production are the most telling symptoms of how these transformations reflect deeper changes in the understanding of creativity itself. During the 20th century, for example, domestic spaces have supported ideas of art as the personal expression of talented individuals, while office organizations have reflected conceptions of creativity as information produced by systems rather than people.
The New Creativity brings together a rich array of designs, documents, and devices that visitors will not only be able to view but that they will be able to use and engage as means of testing their own productive inclinations. This experiment in contemporary creativity will take place within the landmark Schindler House, which is perhaps the first building in Los Angeles to constitute an experiment in creative space itself.
Architects and artists in the exhibition include R.M. Schindler, Paul Rudolph, George Nelson, Robert Propst, Bruce Nauman, Erin Besler, Greg Lynn, Craig Hodgetts, Peter Vikar, and Refik Anadol.
"The New Creativity: Man and Machines"
Curated by Sylvia Lavin with the UCLA Curatorial Project
June 10 – August 16, 2015
at the MAK Center
The MAK Center presents programming that challenges conventional notions of architectural space and relationships between the creative arts. It is headquartered in the landmark Schindler House, 835 N Kings Road, West Hollywood, CA 90069.
Image: Robert Propst, “Time Lapse Study Sheet for Action Office System, HMRC-1, Body Location Pattern.” From the collections of The Henry Ford, copy and reuse restrictions apply (2010.83.649, Robert Propst Papers).
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