He initially had a career as an officer in the Israeli Navy but later decided to become an architect. However, the Haifa Polytechnic architecture course had a two-year waiting list, and in 1957 he went to London instead. After completing his course in furniture and interior design the Central School of Art and Design (now
Central Saint Martins College of Arts and Design), he joined the architectural office of
Ernő Goldfinger. He worked in Goldfinger's practice for a year and then went on to work for
Basil Spence and later for
Andrew Renton. Aram established Aram Designs Ltd. at 57
King's Road, Chelsea in 1964 and was the first retailer to bring the work of modernist designers such as
Marcel Breuer,
Mies van der Rohe,
Carlo Scarpa and
Le Corbusier to the UK market. In 1973 Aram Designs moved into a larger space at 3 Kean Street, Covent Garden. That same year, Irish architect and furniture designer
Eileen Gray granted Aram and Aram Designs Ltd the Worldwide licence to introduce, produce and distribute her designs. Aram worked closely with Gray and played a fundamental role in introducing her designs to the world market. In 2015, Aram acted as consultant and donated furniture to the newly refurbished
E-1027, a modernist villa in
Roquebrune-Cap-Martin that was designed and built between 1926 and 1929 by Gray. Aram was also the director of the Aram Gallery for Experimental and New Design, a non-commercial gallery curating shows focused on experimental design. Through his series of graduate shows he introduced many new designers, such as
Thomas Heatherwick and
Jasper Morrison, who have gone on to become prolific figures in the design industry. Amongst Aram's own furniture designs are the Dino Storage System (1964), the Altra Table System (1967) and the Atlantic Desk (1971). In 2014 he was awarded an
OBE for services to design and architecture. ==Personal life==