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Catalog Data

Commissioned by:
Johnson Publishing Company, American, 1942 - 2019  Search this
Created by:
John Moutoussamy, American, 1922 - 1995  Search this
Designed by:
Arthur Dea Elrod, American, 1924 - 1974  Search this
William C. Raiser, American, 1916 - 1974  Search this
Used by:
Ebony, American, founded 1945  Search this
Charla L. Draper, American  Search this
Charlotte Lyons, American  Search this
Manufactured by:
General Electric Corporation, American, founded 1892  Search this
Medium:
laminate, steel, wood and plastic with fabric, synthetic fiber, and other materials
Dimensions:
L x W (kitchen and seating area, assembled): 26 ft × 13 ft (7.9 meters × 3.97 meters)
H (kitchen ceiling): 8 ft (2.4 meters)
H (seating area ceiling): 8.5 ft (2.5 meters)
Type:
kitchens
appliances
Place used:
Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, United States, North and Central America
Date:
1971; restored 2019
Caption:
From 1972 until 2010, the Ebony Test Kitchen was where recipes were tested and prepared prior to publication in the storied food section of Ebony magazine or in the multiple cookbooks published by the magazine. Food Editors Charla Draper (1982-1984) and Charlotte Lyons (1985-2010) spent their days in the kitchen testing recipes, styling food for photographers, and planning the next issue’s feature in the food editor’s office close by. The kitchen was a popular gathering spot for both staff members and distinguished guests of the Johnson Publishing Company.
The kitchen was designed by Palm Springs-based interior designers William Raiser and Arthur Elrod of Arthur Elrod Associates and built as part of the early 1970s construction of Johnson Publications’ new headquarters on 820 South Michigan Avenue in Chicago, IL. Chicago-based African American architect John Moutoussamy designed the architecturally progressive 11-story building in a prime location across from Grant Park. The interiors were renowned for their lavish design, unique finishings, and state of the art amenities and the kitchen was no exception. The kitchen’s design has been described as “Afrocentric modernism”, “psychedelic,” and “bold.” Throughout its 38-year use, Ebony elected not to renovate or modernize the iconic design, except for replacing the refrigerator once in its history.
In 2010, the Johnson Family sold the Johnson Publications building, but development plans never materialized and the building remained vacant for almost ten years. Grassroots efforts to save the building from demolition led to it being designated as a national landmark in 2017, but the interiors were not protected. Local advocacy efforts resulted in Landmark Illinois, a nonprofit historic preservation organization headquartered in Chicago, working to preserve the kitchen in 2019. The organization documented, disassembled, and stored the kitchen. The Museum of Food and Drink (MOFAD) later moved and reassembled the kitchen for the exhibition African/American: Making the Nation’s Table, before the kitchen was acquired by the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture in 2023.
Description:
The Ebony Test Kitchen, originally located on the 10th floor of the Johnson Publishing Company building in Chicago, Illinois, and restored using original and refurbished pieces. The space comprises both the main kitchen as well as a small sitting room connected via glass doors. The main kitchen features modern, built-in electric appliances by General Electric.
The main kitchen has orange floor tiles and cabinet façades and wallpaper in a swirling, marbleized pattern of orange, olive green, dark purple and earthy red. The focal point is a curved, oblong center island fitted with a six-burner stove and yellow overhead cabinets. Along one wall is a white counter and backsplash with a three-basin sink at center wall and a dishwasher front-paneled with the same marbleized façade as the cabinets. A four-slot toaster is built into the wall at one end of the counter, next to an orange-paneled refrigerator with an ice and water dispenser built-in to one of the French doors. At the other end of the counter is a built-in can opener and a wall with an oven and inset microwave. The opposite wall has a yellow laminate countertop, a serving window, and yellow, glass-front overhead display cabinets. There is a second, smaller sink, another inset can opener, and a trash compactor at the end opposite the refrigerator.
The sitting room area features a wall of built-in, fabric-wrapped yellow bookshelves, beneath which is a six-sided table fitted with a yellow upholstered bench. A television is built into one of the shelf spaces. The sitting room has a carpet in a green, purple, brown, white, and orange basketweave pattern.
Topic:
African American  Search this
Architecture  Search this
Black Press  Search this
Cooking and dining  Search this
Design  Search this
Foodways  Search this
Interior design  Search this
Mass media  Search this
Credit Line:
Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Landmarks Illinois and the Museum of Food and Drink
Object number:
SC.0086
Restrictions & Rights:
Images: © Museum of Food and Drink and Johnson Publishing Company Archive, Courtesy J. Paul Getty Trust and Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture
Rights assessment and proper usage is the responsibility of the user.
See more items in:
National Museum of African American History and Culture Collection
Classification:
Buildings and Structures
Data Source:
National Museum of African American History and Culture
GUID:
http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd569ac211b-2cd7-403e-b230-260dff2edfd7
EDAN-URL:
edanmdm:nmaahc_SC.0086