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Is Paul Tuttle a Forgotten Designer? In the annals of Los Angeles mid-century modernism, Paul TuttleIs Paul Tuttle a Forgotten Designer? In the annals of Los Angeles mid-century modernism, Paul TuttleIs Paul Tuttle a Forgotten Designer? In the annals of Los Angeles mid-century modernism, Paul TuttleIs Paul Tuttle a Forgotten Designer? In the annals of Los Angeles mid-century modernism, Paul TuttleIs Paul Tuttle a Forgotten Designer? In the annals of Los Angeles mid-century modernism, Paul TuttleIs Paul Tuttle a Forgotten Designer? In the annals of Los Angeles mid-century modernism, Paul Tuttle

Is Paul Tuttle a Forgotten Designer?

In the annals of Los Angeles mid-century modernism, Paul Tuttle may not loom nearly as large as Charles Eames and Pierre Koenig, but he should. He created spare but elegant interiors and custom furnishings such as those shown in the 1952 floating glass-box home in Pasadena (2nd photo). (The house was designed by Tuttle’s employer, architect Thornton Ladd.) - David A. Keeps of the Los Angeles Times

Denied entrance to Art Center School in Los Angeles, Tuttle “audited “ a class out of sight of the instructor, Alvin Lustig, a highly respected designer. Tuttle created a model and presented it to the class as if he were enrolled. When Lustig realized he was not, he summarily dismissed him—but he didn’t forget him.

Impressed with Tuttle’s ability, Lustig contacted him within weeks, offering a job in his office. While he was not there long, Tuttle’s lasting friendship with the “pioneer of modern design” was the first of several opportunities that would propel him into the design field.- Jane Ellison of Seasons Magazine

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