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Wikipedia

Le Corbusier

Charles-Édouard Jeanneret (6 October 1887 – 27 August 1965), known as Le Corbusier (UK: /lə kɔːrˈbjuːzi/ lə kor-BEW-zee-ay,[2] US: /lə ˌkɔːrbˈzj, -ˈsj/ KOR-boo-ZYAY, -⁠SYAY,[3][4] French: [lə kɔʁbyzje][5]), was a Swiss-French architect, designer, painter, urban planner, writer, and one of the pioneers of what is now regarded as modern architecture. He was born in Switzerland and became a French citizen in 1930. His career spanned five decades, and he designed buildings in Europe, Japan, India, and North and South America.[6] He considered that "the roots of modern architecture are to be found in Viollet-le-Duc".[7]

Le Corbusier
Le Corbusier in 1964
Born
Charles-Édouard Jeanneret-Gris[1]

(1887-10-06)6 October 1887
Died27 August 1965(1965-08-27) (aged 77)
NationalitySwiss, French
OccupationArchitect
Awards
BuildingsVilla Savoye, Poissy
Villa La Roche, Paris
Unité d'habitation, Marseille
Notre Dame du Haut, Ronchamp
Buildings in Chandigarh, India
ProjectsVille Radieuse
Signature

Dedicated to providing better living conditions for the residents of crowded cities, Le Corbusier was influential in urban planning, and was a founding member of the Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM). Le Corbusier prepared the master plan for the city of Chandigarh in India, and contributed specific designs for several buildings there, especially the government buildings.

On 17 July 2016, seventeen projects by Le Corbusier in seven countries were inscribed in the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites as The Architectural Work of Le Corbusier, an Outstanding Contribution to the Modern Movement.[8]

Le Corbusier remains a controversial figure. Some of his urban planning ideas have been criticized for their indifference to pre-existing cultural sites, societal expression and equality, and his alleged ties with fascism, antisemitism, eugenics,[9] and the dictator Benito Mussolini have resulted in some continuing contention.[10][11][12][13]

Le Corbusier also designed well-known furniture such as the LC4 Chaise Lounge Chair, and the ALC-3001 chair. Both made with leather with metal framing.

Early life (1887–1904)

 
Le Corbusier (Charles-Édouard Jeanneret), 1920, Nature morte (Still Life), oil on canvas, 80.9 cm × 99.7 cm (31.9 in × 39.3 in), Museum of Modern Art, New York

Charles-Édouard Jeanneret was born on 6 October 1887 in La Chaux-de-Fonds, a small city in the French-speaking Neuchâtel canton in north-western Switzerland, in the Jura mountains, 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) across the border from France. It was an industrial town, devoted to manufacturing watches. Among the unifying social structures of La Chaux-de-Fonds was the Loge L'Amitié, the Masonic lodge with its francophone moral, social, and philosophical ideas, including the symbolic iconography of the right angle (rectitude) and the compass (exactitude). Le Corbusier would later describe these as "my guide, my choice" and as his "time-honored ideas, ingrained and deep-rooted in the intellect, like entries from a catechism."[6] (He adopted the pseudonym Le Corbusier in 1920.) His father was an artisan who enamelled boxes and watches, and his mother taught piano. His elder brother Albert was an amateur violinist.[14] He attended a kindergarten that used Fröbelian methods.[15][16][17]

Like his contemporaries Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies van der Rohe, Le Corbusier lacked formal training as an architect. He was attracted to the visual arts; at the age of fifteen, he entered the municipal art school in La-Chaux-de-Fonds which taught the applied arts connected with watchmaking. Three years later he attended the higher course of decoration, founded by the painter Charles L'Eplattenier, who had studied in Budapest and Paris. Le Corbusier wrote later that L'Eplattenier had made him "a man of the woods" and taught him about painting from nature.[14] His father frequently took him into the mountains around the town. He wrote later, "we were constantly on mountaintops; we grew accustomed to a vast horizon."[18] His architecture teacher in the Art School was architect René Chapallaz, who had a large influence on Le Corbusier's earliest house designs. He reported later that it was the art teacher L'Eplattenier who made him choose architecture. "I had a horror of architecture and architects," he wrote. "...I was sixteen, I accepted the verdict and I obeyed. I moved into architecture."[19]

Travel and first houses (1905–1914)

Le Corbusier began teaching himself by going to the library to read about architecture and philosophy, visiting museums, sketching buildings, and constructing them. In 1905, he and two other students, under the supervision of their teacher, René Chapallaz, designed and built his first house, the Villa Fallet, for the engraver Louis Fallet, a friend of his teacher Charles L'Eplattenier. Located on the forested hillside near Chaux-de-fonds, it was a large chalet with a steep roof in the local alpine style and carefully crafted coloured geometric patterns on the façade. The success of this house led to his construction of two similar houses, the Villas Jacquemet and Stotzer, in the same area.[20]

In September 1907, he made his first trip outside of Switzerland, going to Italy; then that winter travelling through Budapest to Vienna, where he stayed for four months and met Gustav Klimt and tried, without success, to meet Josef Hoffmann.[21] In Florence, he visited the Florence Charterhouse in Galluzzo, which made a lifelong impression on him. "I would have liked to live in one of what they called their cells," he wrote later. "It was the solution for a unique kind of worker's housing, or rather for a terrestrial paradise."[22] He travelled to Paris, and for fourteen months between 1908 and 1910 he worked as a draftsman in the office of the architect Auguste Perret, the pioneer of the use of reinforced concrete in residential construction and the architect of the Art Deco landmark Théâtre des Champs-Élysées. Two years later, between October 1910 and March 1911, he travelled to Germany and worked for four months in the office Peter Behrens, where Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius were also working and learning.[23]

In 1911, he travelled again with his friend August Klipstein for five months;[24] this time he journeyed to the Balkans and visited Serbia, Bulgaria, Turkey, Greece, as well as Pompeii and Rome, filling nearly 80 sketchbooks with renderings of what he saw—including many sketches of the Parthenon, whose forms he would later praise in his work Vers une architecture (1923). He spoke of what he saw during this trip in many of his books, and it was the subject of his last book, Le Voyage d'Orient.[23]

In 1912, he began his most ambitious project; a new house for his parents, also located on the forested hillside near La-Chaux-de-Fonds. The Jeanneret-Perret house was larger than the others, and in a more innovative style; the horizontal planes contrasted dramatically with the steep alpine slopes, and the white walls and lack of decoration were in sharp contrast with the other buildings on the hillside. The interior spaces were organized around the four pillars of the salon in the centre, foretelling the open interiors he would create in his later buildings. The project was more expensive to build than he imagined; his parents were forced to move from the house within ten years, and relocate to a more modest house. However, it led to a commission to build an even more imposing villa in the nearby village of Le Locle for a wealthy watch manufacturer, Georges Favre-Jacot. Le Corbusier designed the new house in less than a month. The building was carefully designed to fit its hillside site, and the interior plan was spacious and designed around a courtyard for maximum light, a significant departure from the traditional house.[25]

Dom-ino House and Schwob House (1914–1918)

 
Charles-Édouard Jeanneret, 1914–15, Maison Dom-Ino (Dom-ino House)

During World War I, Le Corbusier taught at his old school in La-Chaux-de-Fonds. He concentrated on theoretical architectural studies using modern techniques.[26] In December 1914, along with the engineer Max Dubois, he began a serious study of the use of reinforced concrete as a building material. He had first discovered concrete working in the office of Auguste Perret, the pioneer of reinforced concrete architecture in Paris, but now wanted to use it in new ways.

"Reinforced concrete provided me with incredible resources," he wrote later, "and variety, and a passionate plasticity in which by themselves my structures will be the rhythm of a palace, and a Pompieen tranquillity."[27] This led him to his plan for the Dom-Ino House (1914–15). This model proposed an open floor plan consisting of three concrete slabs supported by six thin reinforced concrete columns, with a stairway providing access to each level on one side of the floor plan.[28] The system was originally designed to provide large numbers of temporary residences after World War I, producing only slabs, columns and stairways, and residents could build exterior walls with the materials around the site. He described it in his patent application as "a juxtiposable system of construction according to an infinite number of combinations of plans. This would permit, he wrote, "the construction of the dividing walls at any point on the façade or the interior."

 
The Anatole Schwob House in La-Chaux-de-Fonds (1916–1918)

Under this system, the structure of the house did not have to appear on the outside but could be hidden behind a glass wall, and the interior could be arranged in any way the architect liked.[29] After it was patented, Le Corbusier designed several houses according to the system, which was all white concrete boxes. Although some of these were never built, they illustrated his basic architectural ideas which would dominate his works throughout the 1920s. He refined the idea in his 1927 book on the Five Points of a New Architecture. This design, which called for the disassociation of the structure from the walls, and the freedom of plans and façades, became the foundation for most of his architecture over the next ten years.[30]

In August 1916, Le Corbusier received his largest commission ever, to construct a villa for the Swiss watchmaker Anatole Schwob, for whom he had already completed several small remodelling projects. He was given a large budget and the freedom to design not only the house but also to create the interior decoration and choose the furniture. Following the precepts of Auguste Perret, he built the structure out of reinforced concrete and filled the gaps with brick. The centre of the house is a large concrete box with two semicolumn structures on both sides, which reflects his ideas of pure geometrical forms. A large open hall with a chandelier occupied the centre of the building. "You can see," he wrote to Auguste Perret in July 1916, "that Auguste Perret left more in me than Peter Behrens."[31]

Le Corbusier's grand ambitions collided with the ideas and budget of his client and led to bitter conflicts. Schwob went to court and denied Le Corbusier access to the site, or the right to claim to be the architect. Le Corbusier responded, "Whether you like it or not, my presence is inscribed in every corner of your house." Le Corbusier took great pride in the house and reproduced pictures in several of his books.[32]

Painting, Cubism, Purism and L'Esprit Nouveau (1918–1922)

 
Le Corbusier, 1921, Nature morte (Still Life), oil on canvas, 54 x 81 cm, Musée National d'Art Moderne, Paris
 
Le Corbusier, 1922, Nature morte verticale (Vertical Still Life), oil on canvas, 146.3 cm × 89.3 cm (57.6 by 35.2 inches), Kunstmuseum Basel
 
Le Corbusier, 1920, Guitare verticale (2ème version), oil on canvas, 100 cm × 81 cm (39 in × 32 in), Fondation Le Corbusier, Paris

Le Corbusier moved to Paris definitively in 1917 and began his architectural practise with his cousin, Pierre Jeanneret (1896–1967), a partnership that would last until the 1950s, with an interruption in the World War II years.[33]

In 1918, Le Corbusier met the Cubist painter Amédée Ozenfant, in whom he recognised a kindred spirit. Ozenfant encouraged him to paint, and the two began a period of collaboration. Rejecting Cubism as irrational and "romantic", the pair jointly published their manifesto, Après le cubisme and established a new artistic movement, Purism. Ozenfant and Le Corbusier began writing for a new journal, L'Esprit Nouveau, and promoted with energy and imagination his ideas of architecture.

In the first issue of the journal, in 1920, Charles-Edouard Jeanneret adopted Le Corbusier (an altered form of his maternal grandfather's name, Lecorbésier) as a pseudonym, reflecting his belief that anyone could reinvent themselves.[34][35] Adopting a single name to identify oneself was in vogue by artists in many fields during that era, especially in Paris.

Between 1918 and 1922, Le Corbusier did not build anything, concentrating his efforts on Purist theory and painting. In 1922, he and his cousin Pierre Jeanneret opened a studio in Paris at 35 rue de Sèvres.[26] They set up an architectural practice together. From 1927 to 1937 they worked together with Charlotte Perriand at the Le Corbusier-Pierre Jeanneret studio.[36] In 1929 the trio prepared the "House fittings" section for the Decorative Artists Exhibition and asked for a group stand, renewing and widening the 1928 avant-garde group idea. This was refused by the Decorative Artists Committee. They resigned and founded the Union of Modern Artists ("Union des artistes modernes": UAM).

His theoretical studies soon advanced into several different single-family house models. Among these, was the Maison "Citrohan." The project's name was a reference to the French Citroën automaker, for the modern industrial methods and materials, Le Corbusier advocated using in the house's construction as well as how he intended the homes would be consumed, similar to other commercial products, like the automobile.[37]

As part of the Maison Citrohan model, Le Corbusier proposed a three-floor structure, with a double-height living room, bedrooms on the second floor, and a kitchen on the third floor. The roof would be occupied by a sun terrace. On the exterior, Le Corbusier installed a stairway to provide second-floor access from the ground level. Here, as in other projects from this period, he also designed the façades to include large uninterrupted banks of windows. The house used a rectangular plan, with exterior walls that were not filled by windows but left as white, stuccoed spaces. Le Corbusier and Jeanneret left the interior aesthetically spare, with any movable furniture made of tubular metal frames. Light fixtures usually comprised single, bare bulbs. Interior walls also were left white.

Toward an Architecture (1920–1923)

In 1922 and 1923, Le Corbusier devoted himself to advocating his new concepts of architecture and urban planning in a series of polemical articles published in L'Esprit Nouveau. At the Paris Salon d'Automne in 1922, he presented his plan for the Ville Contemporaine, a model city for three million people, whose residents would live and work in a group of identical sixty-story tall apartment buildings surrounded by lower zig-zag apartment blocks and a large park. In 1923, he collected his essays from L'Esprit Nouveau published his first and most influential book, Towards an Architecture. He presented his ideas for the future of architecture in a series of maxims, declarations, and exhortations, pronouncing that "a grand epoch has just begun. There exists a new spirit. There already exist a crowd of works in the new spirit, they are found especially in industrial production. Architecture is suffocating in its current uses. "Styles" are a lie. Style is a unity of principles which animates all the work of a period and which result in a characteristic spirit...Our epoch determines each day its style..-Our eyes, unfortunately, don't know how to see it yet," and his most famous maxim, "A house is a machine to live in." Most of the many photographs and drawings in the book came from outside the world of traditional architecture; the cover showed the promenade deck of an ocean liner, while others showed racing cars, aeroplanes, factories, and the huge concrete and steel arches of zeppelin hangars.[38]

L'Esprit Nouveau Pavilion (1925)

 
The Pavilion of the Esprit Nouveau (1925)
 
The model of the Plan Voisin for the reconstruction of Paris displayed at the Pavilion of the Esprit Nouveau

An important early work of Le Corbusier was the Esprit Nouveau Pavilion, built for the 1925 Paris International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts, the event which later gave Art Deco its name. Le Corbusier built the pavilion in collaboration with Amédée Ozenfant and with his cousin Pierre Jeanneret. Le Corbusier and Ozenfant had broken with Cubism and formed the Purism movement in 1918 and in 1920 founded their journal L'Esprit Nouveau. In his new journal, Le Corbusier vividly denounced the decorative arts: "Decorative Art, as opposed to the machine phenomenon, is the final twitch of the old manual modes, a dying thing." To illustrate his ideas, he and Ozenfant decided to create a small pavilion at the Exposition, representing his idea of the future urban housing unit. A house, he wrote, "is a cell within the body of a city. The cell is made up of the vital elements which are the mechanics of a house...Decorative art is antistandardizational. Our pavilion will contain only standard things created by industry in factories and mass-produced, objects truly of the style of today...my pavilion will therefore be a cell extracted from a huge apartment building."[39]

Le Corbusier and his collaborators were given a plot of land located behind the Grand Palais in the centre of the Exposition. The plot was forested, and exhibitors could not cut down trees, so Le Corbusier built his pavilion with a tree in the centre, emerging through a hole in the roof. The building was a stark white box with an interior terrace and square glass windows. The interior was decorated with a few cubist paintings and a few pieces of mass-produced commercially available furniture, entirely different from the expensive one-of-a-kind pieces in the other pavilions. The chief organizers of the Exposition were furious and built a fence to partially hide the pavilion. Le Corbusier had to appeal to the Ministry of Fine Arts, which ordered that fence be taken down.[39]

Besides the furniture, the pavilion exhibited a model of his 'Plan Voisin', his provocative plan for rebuilding a large part of the centre of Paris. He proposed to bulldoze a large area north of the Seine and replace the narrow streets, monuments and houses with giant sixty-story cruciform towers placed within an orthogonal street grid and park-like green space. His scheme was met with criticism and scorn from French politicians and industrialists, although they were favourable to the ideas of Taylorism and Fordism underlying his designs. The plan was never seriously considered, but it provoked discussion concerning how to deal with the overcrowded poor working-class neighbourhoods of Paris, and it later saw the partial realization in the housing developments built in the Paris suburbs in the 1950s and 1960s.

The Pavilion was ridiculed by many critics, but Le Corbusier, undaunted, wrote: "Right now one thing is sure. 1925 marks the decisive turning point in the quarrel between the old and new. After 1925, the antique-lovers will have virtually ended their lives . . . Progress is achieved through experimentation; the decision will be awarded on the field of battle of the 'new'."[40]

The Decorative Art of Today (1925)

In 1925, Le Corbusier combined a series of articles about decorative art from "L'Esprit Nouveau" into a book, L'art décoratif d'aujourd'hui (The Decorative Art of Today).[41][42] The book was a spirited attack on the very idea of decorative art. His basic premise, repeated throughout the book, was: "Modern decorative art has no decoration."[43] He attacked with enthusiasm the styles presented at the 1925 Exposition of Decorative Arts: "The desire to decorate everything about one is a false spirit and an abominable small perversion....The religion of beautiful materials is in its final death agony...The almost hysterical onrush in recent years toward this quasi-orgy of decor is only the last spasm of a death already predictable."[44] He cited the 1912 book of the Austrian architect Adolf Loos "Ornament and crime", and quoted Loos's dictum, "The more a people are cultivated, the more decor disappears." He attacked the deco revival of classical styles, what he called "Louis Philippe and Louis XVI moderne"; he condemned the "symphony of color" at the Exposition, and called it "the triumph of assemblers of colors and materials. They were swaggering in colors... They were making stews out of fine cuisine." He condemned the exotic styles presented at the Exposition based on the art of China, Japan, India and Persia. "It takes energy today to affirm our western styles." He criticized the "precious and useless objects that accumulated on the shelves" in the new style. He attacked the "rustling silks, the marbles which twist and turn, the vermilion whiplashes, the silver blades of Byzantium and the Orient...Let's be done with it!"[45]

"Why call bottles, chairs, baskets and objects decorative?" Le Corbusier asked. "They are useful tools....The decor is not necessary. Art is necessary." He declared that in the future the decorative arts industry would produce only "objects which are perfectly useful, convenient, and have a true luxury which pleases our spirit by their elegance and the purity of their execution and the efficiency of their services. This rational perfection and precise determinate creates the link sufficient to recognize a style." He described the future of decoration in these terms: "The idea is to go work in the superb office of a modern factory, rectangular and well-lit, painted in white Ripolin (a major French paint manufacturer); where healthy activity and laborious optimism reign." He concluded by repeating "Modern decoration has no decoration".[45]

The book became a manifesto for those who opposed the more traditional styles of the decorative arts; In the 1930s, as Le Corbusier predicted, the modernized versions of Louis Philippe and Louis XVI furniture and the brightly coloured wallpapers of stylized roses were replaced by a more sober, more streamlined style. Gradually the modernism and functionality proposed by Le Corbusier overtook the more ornamental style. The shorthand titles that Le Corbusier used in the book, 1925 Expo: Arts Deco were adapted in 1966 by the art historian Bevis Hillier for a catalogue of an exhibition on the style, and in 1968 in the title of a book, Art Deco of the 20s and 30s. And thereafter the term "Art Deco" was commonly used as the name of the style.[46]

Five Points of Architecture to Villa Savoye (1923–1931)

The notoriety that Le Corbusier achieved from his writings and the Pavilion at the 1925 Exposition led to commissions to build a dozen residences in Paris and the Paris region in his "purist style." These included the Maison La Roche/Albert Jeanneret (1923–1925), which now houses the Fondation Le Corbusier; the Maison Guiette in Antwerp, Belgium (1926); a residence for Jacques Lipchitz; the Maison Cook, and the Maison Planeix. In 1927, he was invited by the German Werkbund to build three houses in the model city of Weissenhof near Stuttgart, based on the Citroen House and other theoretical models he had published. He described this project in detail in one of his best-known essays, the Five Points of Architecture.[47]

The following year he began the Villa Savoye (1928–1931), which became one of the most famous of Le Corbusier's works, and an icon of modernist architecture. Located in Poissy, in a landscape surrounded by trees and a large lawn, the house is an elegant white box poised on rows of slender pylons, surrounded by a horizontal band of windows which fill the structure with light. The service areas (parking, rooms for servants and laundry room) are located under the house. Visitors enter a vestibule from which a gentle ramp leads to the house itself. The bedrooms and salons of the house are distributed around a suspended garden; the rooms look both out at the landscape and into the garden, which provides additional light and air. Another ramp leads up to the roof, and a stairway leads down to the cellar under the pillars.

Villa Savoye succinctly summed up the five points of architecture that he had elucidated in L'Esprit Nouveau and the book Vers une architecture, which he had been developing throughout the 1920s. First, Le Corbusier lifted the bulk of the structure off the ground, supporting it by pilotis, reinforced concrete stilts. These pilotis, in providing the structural support for the house, allowed him to elucidate his next two points: a free façade, meaning non-supporting walls that could be designed as the architect wished, and an open floor plan, meaning that the floor space was free to be configured into rooms without concern for supporting walls. The second floor of the Villa Savoye includes long strips of ribbon windows that allow unencumbered views of the large surrounding garden, which constitute the fourth point of his system. The fifth point was the roof garden to compensate for the green area consumed by the building and replace it on the roof. A ramp rising from ground level to the third-floor roof terrace allows for a promenade architecturale through the structure. The white tubular railing recalls the industrial "ocean-liner" aesthetic that Le Corbusier much admired.

Le Corbusier was quite rhapsodic when describing the house in Précisions in 1930: "the plan is pure, exactly made for the needs of the house. It has its correct place in the rustic landscape of Poissy. It is Poetry and lyricism, supported by technique."[48] The house had its problems; the roof persistently leaked, due to construction faults; but it became a landmark of modern architecture and one of the best-known works of Le Corbusier.[48]

League of Nations Competition and Pessac Housing Project (1926–1930)

Thanks to his passionate articles in L'Esprit Nouveau, his participation in the 1925 Decorative Arts Exposition and the conferences he gave on the new spirit of architecture, Le Corbusier had become well known in the architectural world, though he had only built residences for wealthy clients. In 1926, he entered the competition for the construction of a headquarters for the League of Nations in Geneva with a plan for an innovative lakeside complex of modernist white concrete office buildings and meeting halls. There were 337 projects in competition. It appeared that the Corbusier's project was the first choice of the architectural jury, but after much behind-the-scenes manoeuvring, the jury declared it was unable to pick a single winner, and the project was given instead to the top five architects, who were all neoclassicists. Le Corbusier was not discouraged; he presented his plans to the public in articles and lectures to show the opportunity that the League of Nations had missed.[49]

The Cité Frugès

In 1926, Le Corbusier received the opportunity he had been looking for; he was commissioned by a Bordeaux industrialist, Henry Frugès, a fervent admirer of his ideas on urban planning, to build a complex of worker housing, the Cité Frugès, at Pessac, a suburb of Bordeaux. Le Corbusier described Pessac as "A little like a Balzac novel", a chance to create a whole community for living and working. The Fruges quarter became his first laboratory for residential housing; a series of rectangular blocks composed of modular housing units located in a garden setting. Like the unit displayed at the 1925 Exposition, each housing unit had its own small terrace. The earlier villas he constructed all had white exterior walls, but for Pessac, at the request of his clients, he added colour; panels of brown, yellow and jade green, coordinated by Le Corbusier. Originally planned to have some two hundred units, it finally contained about fifty to seventy housing units, in eight buildings. Pessac became the model on a small scale for his later and much larger Cité Radieuse projects.[50]

Founding of CIAM (1928) and Athens Charter

In 1928, Le Corbusier took a major step toward establishing modernist architecture as the dominant European style. Le Corbusier had met with many of the leading German and Austrian modernists during the competition for the League of Nations in 1927. In the same year, the German Werkbund organized an architectural exposition at the Weissenhof Estate Stuttgart. Seventeen leading modernist architects in Europe were invited to design twenty-one houses; Le Corbusier and Mies van der Rohe played a major part. In 1927 Le Corbusier, Pierre Chareau and others proposed the foundation of an international conference to establish the basis for a common style. The first meeting of the Congrès Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne or International Congresses of Modern Architects (CIAM), was held in a château on Lake Leman in Switzerland 26–28 June 1928. Those attending included Le Corbusier, Robert Mallet-Stevens, Auguste Perret, Pierre Chareau and Tony Garnier from France; Victor Bourgeois from Belgium; Walter Gropius, Erich Mendelsohn, Ernst May and Mies van der Rohe from Germany; Josef Frank from Austria; Mart Stam and Gerrit Rietveld from the Netherlands, and Adolf Loos from Czechoslovakia. A delegation of Soviet architects was invited to attend, but they were unable to obtain visas. Later members included Josep Lluís Sert of Spain and Alvar Aalto of Finland. No one attended from the United States. A second meeting was organized in 1930 in Brussels by Victor Bourgeois on the topic "Rational methods for groups of habitations". A third meeting, on "The functional city", was scheduled for Moscow in 1932, but was cancelled at the last minute. Instead, the delegates held their meeting on a cruise ship travelling between Marseille and Athens. Onboard, they together drafted a text on how modern cities should be organized. The text, called The Athens Charter, after considerable editing by Le Corbusier and others, was finally published in 1943 and became an influential text for city planners in the 1950s and 1960s. The group met once more in Paris in 1937 to discuss public housing and was scheduled to meet in the United States in 1939, but the meeting was cancelled because of the war. The legacy of the CIAM was a roughly common style and doctrine which helped define modern architecture in Europe and the United States after World War II.[51]

Projects (1928–1963)

Moscow projects (1928–1934)

 
Building of the Tsentrosoyuz, headquarters of Soviet trade unions, Moscow (1928–34)

Le Corbusier saw the new society founded in the Soviet Union after the Russian Revolution as a promising laboratory for his architectural ideas. He met the Russian architect Konstantin Melnikov during the 1925 Decorative Arts Exposition in Paris, and admired the construction of Melnikov's constructivist USSR pavilion, the only truly modernist building in the Exposition other than his own Esprit Nouveau pavilion. At Melnikov's invitation, he travelled to Moscow, where he found that his writings had been published in Russian; he gave lectures and interviews and between 1928 and 1932 he constructed an office building for the Tsentrosoyuz, the headquarters of Soviet trade unions.

In 1932, he was invited to take part in an international competition for the new Palace of the Soviets in Moscow, which was to be built on the site of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, demolished on Stalin's orders. Le Corbusier contributed a highly original plan, a low-level complex of circular and rectangular buildings and a rainbow-like arch from which the roof of the main meeting hall was suspended. To Le Corbusier's distress, his plan was rejected by Stalin in favour of a plan for a massive neoclassical tower, the highest in Europe, crowned with a statue of Vladimir Lenin. The Palace was never built; construction was stopped by World War II, a swimming pool took its place, and after the collapse of the USSR the cathedral was rebuilt on its original site.[52]

Cité Universitaire, Immeuble Clarté and Cité de Refuge (1928–1933)

 
The Immeuble Clarté in Geneva (1930–1932)

Between 1928 and 1934, as Le Corbusier's reputation grew, he received commissions to construct a wide variety of buildings. In 1928 he received a commission from the Soviet government to construct the headquarters of the Tsentrosoyuz, or central office of trade unions, a large office building whose glass walls alternated with plaques of stone. He built the Villa de Madrot in Le Pradet (1929–1931); and an apartment in Paris for Charles de Bestigui at the top of an existing building on the Champs-Élysées 1929–1932, (later demolished). In 1929–1930 he constructed a floating homeless shelter for the Salvation Army on the left bank of the Seine at the Pont d'Austerlitz. Between 1929 and 1933, he built a larger and more ambitious project for the Salvation Army, the Cité de Refuge, on rue Cantagrel in the 13th arrondissement of Paris. He also constructed the Swiss Pavilion in the Cité Universitaire in Paris with 46 units of student housing, (1929–33). He designed furniture to go with the building; the main salon was decorated with a montage of black-and-white photographs of nature. In 1948, he replaced this with a colourful mural he painted himself. In Geneva, he built a glass-walled apartment building with 45 units, the Immeuble Clarté. Between 1931 and 1945 he built an apartment building with fifteen units, including an apartment and studio for himself on the 6th and 7th floors, at 24 rue Nungesser-et-Coli in the 16th arrondissement in Paris. overlooking the Bois de Boulogne.[53] His apartment and studio are owned today by the Fondation Le Corbusier and can be visited.

Ville Contemporaine, Plan Voisin and Cité Radieuse (1922–1939)

As the global Great Depression enveloped Europe, Le Corbusier devoted more and more time to his ideas for urban design and planned cities. He believed that his new, modern architectural forms would provide an organizational solution that would raise the quality of life for the working classes. In 1922 he had presented his model of the Ville Contemporaine, a city of three million inhabitants, at the Salon d'Automne in Paris. His plan featured tall office towers surrounded by lower residential blocks in a park setting. He reported that "analysis leads to such dimensions, to such a new scale, and to such the creation of an urban organism so different from those that exist, that it that the mind can hardly imagine it."[54] The Ville Contemporaine, presenting an imaginary city in an imaginary location, did not attract the attention that Le Corbusier wanted. For his next proposal, the Plan Voisin (1925), he took a much more provocative approach; he proposed to demolish a large part of central Paris and replace it with a group of sixty-story cruciform office towers surrounded by parkland. This idea shocked most viewers, as it was certainly intended to do. The plan included a multi-level transportation hub that included depots for buses and trains, as well as highway intersections, and an airport. Le Corbusier had the fanciful notion that commercial airliners would land between the huge skyscrapers. He segregated pedestrian circulation paths from the roadways and created an elaborate road network. Groups of lower-rise zigzag apartment blocks, set back from the street, were interspersed among the office towers. Le Corbusier wrote: "The centre of Paris, currently threatened with death, threatened by exodus, is, in reality, a diamond mine...To abandon the centre of Paris to its fate is to desert in face of the enemy." [55]

As no doubt Le Corbusier expected, no one hurried to implement the Plan Voisin, but he continued working on variations of the idea and recruiting followers. In 1929, he travelled to Brazil where he gave conferences on his architectural ideas. He returned with drawings of his vision for Rio de Janeiro; he sketched serpentine multi-story apartment buildings on pylons, like inhabited highways, winding through Rio de Janeiro.

In 1931, he developed a visionary plan for another city Algiers, then part of France. This plan, like his Rio Janeiro plan, called for the construction of an elevated viaduct of concrete, carrying residential units, which would run from one end of the city to the other. This plan, unlike his early Plan Voisin, was more conservative, because it did not call for the destruction of the old city of Algiers; the residential housing would be over the top of the old city. This plan, like his Paris plans, provoked discussion but never came close to realization.

In 1935, Le Corbusier made his first visit to the United States. He was asked by American journalists what he thought about New York City skyscrapers; he responded, characteristically, that he found them "much too small".[56] He wrote a book describing his experiences in the States, Quand Les cathédrales étaient blanches, Voyage au pays des timides (When Cathedrals were White; voyage to the land of the timid) whose title expressed his view of the lack of boldness in American architecture.[57]

He wrote a great deal but built very little in the late 1930s. The titles of his books expressed the combined urgency and optimism of his messages: Cannons? Munitions? No thank you, Lodging please! (1938) and The lyricism of modern times and urbanism (1939).

In 1928, the French Minister of Labour, Louis Loucheur, won the passage of French law on public housing, calling for the construction of 260,000 new housing units within five years. Le Corbusier immediately began to design a new type of modular housing unit, which he called the Maison Loucheur, which would be suitable for the project. These units were forty-five square metres (480 square feet) in size, made with metal frames, and were designed to be mass-produced and then transported to the site, where they would be inserted into frameworks of steel and stone; The government insisted on stone walls to win the support of local building contractors. The standardisation of apartment buildings was the essence of what Le Corbusier termed the Ville Radieuse or "radiant city", in a new book published in 1935. The Radiant City was similar to his earlier Contemporary City and Plan Voisin, with the difference that residences would be assigned by family size, rather than by income and social position. In his 1935 book, he developed his ideas for a new kind of city, where the principal functions; heavy industry, manufacturing, habitation and commerce, would be separated into their neighbourhoods, carefully planned and designed. However, before any units could be built, World War II intervened.

World War II and Reconstruction; Unité d'Habitation in Marseille (1939–1952)

During the War and the German occupation of France, Le Corbusier did his best to promote his architectural projects. He moved to Vichy for a time, where the collaborationist government of Marshal Philippe Petain was located, offering his services for architectural projects, including his plan for the reconstruction of Algiers, but they were rejected. He continued writing, completing Sur les Quatres routes (On the Four Routes) in 1941. After 1942 Le Corbusier left Vichy for Paris.[58] He became for a time a technical adviser at Alexis Carrel's eugenics foundation but resigned on 20 April 1944.[59] In 1943 he founded a new association of modern architects and builders, the Ascoral, the Assembly of Constructors for a renewal of architecture, but there were no projects to build.[60]

When the war ended Le Corbusier was nearly sixty years old and he had not had a single project realized for ten years. He tried, without success, to obtain commissions for several of the first large reconstruction projects, but his proposals for the reconstruction of the town of Saint-Dié and for La Rochelle were rejected. Still, he persisted and finally found a willing partner in Raoul Dautry, the new Minister of Reconstruction and Town Planning. Dautry agreed to fund one of his projects, a "Unité habitation de grandeur conforme", or housing units of standard size, with the first one to be built in Marseille, which had been heavily damaged during the war.[61]

This was his first public commission and was a breakthrough for Le Corbusier. He gave the building the name of his pre-war theoretical project, the Cité Radieuse, and followed the principles that he had studied before the war, proposing a giant reinforced-concrete framework into which modular apartments would fit like bottles into a bottle rack. Like the Villa Savoye, the structure was poised on concrete pylons though, because of the shortage of steel to reinforce the concrete, the pylons were more massive than usual. The building contained 337 duplex apartment modules to house a total of 1,600 people. Each module was three storeys high and contained two apartments, combined so each had two levels (see diagram above). The modules ran from one side of the building to the other and each apartment had a small terrace at each end. They were ingeniously fitted together like pieces of a Chinese puzzle, with a corridor slotted through the space between the two apartments in each module. Residents had a choice of twenty-three different configurations for the units. Le Corbusier designed furniture, carpets and lamps to go with the building, all purely functional; the only decoration was a choice of interior colours. The only mildly decorative features of the building were the ventilator shafts on the roof, which Le Corbusier made to look like the smokestacks of an ocean liner, a functional form that he admired.

The building was designed not just to be a residence but to offer all the services needed for living. On every third floor, between the modules, there was a wide corridor, like an interior street, which ran the length of the building. This served as a sort of commercial street, with shops, eating places, a nursery school and recreational facilities. A running track and small stage for theatre performances were located on the roof. The building itself was surrounded by trees and a small park.

Le Corbusier wrote later that the Unité d'Habitation concept was inspired by the visit he had made to the Florence Charterhouse at Galluzzo in Italy, in 1907 and 1910 during his early travels. He wanted to recreate, he wrote, an ideal place "for meditation and contemplation". He also learned from the monastery, he wrote, that "standardization led to perfection", and that "all of his life a man labours under this impulse: to make the home the temple of the family". [62]

The Unité d'Habitation marked a turning point in the career of Le Corbusier; in 1952, he was made a Commander of the Légion d'Honneur in a ceremony held on the roof of his new building. He had progressed from being an outsider and critic of the architectural establishment to its centre, as the most prominent French architect.[63]

Postwar projects, United Nations headquarters (1947–1952)

 
The headquarters of the United Nations designed by Le Corbusier, Oscar Niemeyer and Wallace K. Harrison (1947–1952)

Le Corbusier made another almost identical Unité d'Habitation in Rezé-les-Nantes in the Loire-Atlantique Department between 1948 and 1952, and three more over the following years, in Berlin, Briey-en-Forêt and Firminy; and he designed a factory for the company of Claude and Duval, in Saint-Dié in the Vosges. In the post-Second World War decades, Le Corbusier's fame moved beyond architectural and planning circles as he became one of the leading intellectual figures of the time.[64]

In early 1947 Le Corbusier submitted a design for the headquarters of the United Nations, which was to be built beside the East River in New York. Instead of competition, the design was to be selected by a Board of Design Consultants composed of leading international architects nominated by member governments, including Le Corbusier, Oscar Niemeyer of Brazil, Howard Robertson from Britain, Nikolai Bassov of the Soviet Union, and five others from around the world. The committee was under the direction of the American architect Wallace K. Harrison, who was also the architect for the Rockefeller family, which had donated the site for the building.

Le Corbusier had submitted his plan for the Secretariat, called Plan 23 of the 58 submitted. In Le Corbusier's plan offices, council chambers and General Assembly Hall were in a single block in the centre of the site. He lobbied hard for his project, and asked the younger Brazilian architect, Niemeyer, to support and assist him with his plan. Niemeyer, to help Le Corbusier, refused to submit his design and did not attend the meetings until the Director, Harrison, insisted. Niemeyer then submitted his plan, Plan 32, with the office building and councils and General Assembly in separate buildings. After much discussion, the Committee chose Niemeyer's plan but suggested that he collaborate with Le Corbusier on the final project. Le Corbusier urged Niemeyer to put the General Assembly Hall in the centre of the site, though this would eliminate Niemeyer's plan to have a large plaza in the centre. Niemeyer agreed with Le Corbusier's suggestion, and the headquarters was built, with minor modifications, according to their joint plan.[65]

Religious architecture (1950–1963)

Le Corbusier was an avowed atheist, but he also had a strong belief in the ability of architecture to create a sacred and spiritual environment. In the postwar years, he designed two important religious buildings; the chapel of Notre-Dame-du-Haut at Ronchamp (1950–1955); and the Convent of Sainte Marie de La Tourette (1953–1960). Le Corbusier wrote later that he was greatly aided in his religious architecture by a Dominican father, Père Couturier, who had founded a movement and review of modern religious art.

Le Corbusier first visited the remote mountain site of Ronchamp in May 1950, saw the ruins of the old chapel, and drew sketches of possible forms. He wrote afterwards: "In building this chapel, I wanted to create a place of silence, of peace, of prayer, of interior joy. The feeling of the sacred animated our effort. Some things are sacred, others aren't, whether they're religious or not."[66]

The second major religious project undertaken by Le Corbusier was the Convent of Sainte Marie de La Tourette in L'Arbresle in the Rhone Department (1953–1960). Once again it was Father Couturier who engaged Le Corbusier in the project. He invited Le Corbusier to visit the starkly simple and imposing 12th–13th century Le Thoronet Abbey in Provence, and also used his memories of his youthful visit to the Erna Charterhouse in Florence. This project involved not only a chapel, but a library, refectory, rooms for meetings and reflection, and dormitories for the nuns. For the living space he used the same Modulor concept for measuring the ideal living space that he had used in the Unité d'Habitation in Marseille; height under the ceiling of 2.26 metres (7 feet 5 inches); and width 1.83 metres (6 feet 0 inches).[67]

Le Corbusier used raw concrete to construct the convent, which is placed on the side of a hill. The three blocks of dormitories are U, closed by the chapel, with a courtyard in the centre. The Convent has a flat roof and is placed on sculpted concrete pillars. Each of the residential cells has a small loggia with a concrete sunscreen looking out at the countryside. The centrepiece of the convent is the chapel, a plain box of concrete, which he called his "Box of miracles." Unlike the highly finished façade of the Unité d'Habitation, the façade of the chapel is raw, unfinished concrete. He described the building in a letter to Albert Camus in 1957: "I'm taken with the idea of a "box of miracles"....as the name indicates, it is a rectangular box made of concrete. It doesn't have any of the traditional theatrical tricks, but the possibility, as its name suggests, to make miracles."[68] The interior of the chapel is extremely simple, only benches in a plain, unfinished concrete box, with light coming through a single square in the roof and six small bands on the sides. The Crypt beneath has intense blue, red and yellow walls, and illumination by sunlight channelled from above. The monastery has other unusual features, including floor to ceiling panels of glass in the meeting rooms, window panels that fragmented the view into pieces, and a system of concrete and metal tubes like gun barrels which aimed sunlight through coloured prisms and projected it onto the walls of the sacristy and to the secondary altars of the crypt on the level below. These were whimsically termed the ""machine guns" of the sacristy and the "light cannons" of the crypt.[69]

In 1960, Le Corbusier began a third religious building, the Church of Saint Pierre in the new town of Firminy-Vert, where he had built a Unité d'Habitation and a cultural and sports centre. While he made the original design, construction did not begin until five years after his death, and work continued under different architects until it was completed in 2006. The most spectacular feature of the church is the sloping concrete tower that covers the entire interior, similar to that in the Assembly Building in his complex at Chandigarh. Windows high in the tower illuminates the interior. Le Corbusier originally proposed that tiny windows also project the form of a constellation on the walls. Later architects designed the church to project the constellation Orion.[70]

Chandigarh (1951–1956)

Le Corbusier's largest and most ambitious project was the design of Chandigarh, the capital city of the Punjab and Haryana States of India, created after India received independence in 1947. Le Corbusier was contacted in 1950 by Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, and invited to propose a project. An American architect, Albert Mayer, had made a plan in 1947 for a city of 150,000 inhabitants, but the Indian government wanted a grander and more monumental city. Corbusier worked on the plan with two British specialists in urban design and tropical climate architecture, Maxwell Fry and Jane Drew, and with his cousin, Pierre Jeanneret, who moved to India and supervised the construction until his death.

Le Corbusier, as always, was rhapsodic about his project; "It will be a city of trees," he wrote, "of flowers and water, of houses as simple as those at the time of Homer, and of a few splendid edifices of the highest level of modernism, where the rules of mathematics will reign."[71] His plan called for residential, commercial and industrial areas, along with parks and transportation infrastructure. In the middle was the capitol, a complex of four major government buildings; the Palace of the National Assembly, the High Court of Justice; the Palace of Secretariat of Ministers, and the Palace of the Governor. For financial and political reasons, the Palace of the Governor was dropped well into the construction of the city, throwing the final project somewhat off-balance.[72] From the beginning, Le Corbusier worked, as he reported, "Like a forced labourer." He dismissed the earlier American plan as "Faux-Moderne" and overly filled with parking spaces and roads. He intended to present what he had learned in forty years of urban study, and also to show the French government the opportunities they had missed in not choosing him to rebuild French cities after the War.[72] His design made use of many of his favourite ideas: an architectural promenade, incorporating the local landscape and the sunlight and shadows into the design; the use of the Modulor to give a correct human scale to each element; and his favourite symbol, the open hand ("The hand is open to give and to receive"). He placed a monumental open hand statue in a prominent place in the design.[72]

Le Corbusier's design called for the use of raw concrete, whose surface was not smoothed or polished and which showed the marks of the forms in which it dried. Pierre Jeanneret wrote to his cousin that he was in a continual battle with the construction workers, who could not resist the urge to smooth and finish the raw concrete, particularly when important visitors were coming to the site. At one point one thousand workers were employed on the site of the High Court of Justice. Le Corbusier wrote to his mother, "It is an architectural symphony which surpasses all my hopes, which flashes and develops under the light in a way which is unimaginable and unforgettable. From far, from up close, it provokes astonishment; all made with raw concrete and a cement cannon. Adorable, and grandiose. In all the centuries no one has seen that."[73]

The High Court of Justice, begun in 1951, was finished in 1956. The building was radical in its design; a parallelogram topped with an inverted parasol. Along the walls were high concrete grills 1.5 metres (4 feet 11 inches) thick which served as sunshades. The entry featured a monumental ramp and columns that allowed the air to circulate. The pillars were originally white limestone, but in the 1960s they were repainted in bright colours, which better resisted the weather.[72]

The Secretariat, the largest building that housed the government offices, was constructed between 1952 and 1958. It is an enormous block 250 metres (820 feet) long and eight levels high, served by a ramp which extends from the ground to the top level. The ramp was designed to be partly sculptural and partly practical. Since there were no modern building cranes at the time of construction, the ramp was the only way to get materials to the top of the construction site. The Secretariat had two features which were borrowed from his design for the Unité d'Habitation in Marseille: concrete grill sunscreens over the windows and a roof terrace.[72]

The most important building of the capitol complex was the Palace of Assembly (1952–61), which faced the High Court at the other end of a five hundred meter esplanade with a large reflecting pool in the front. This building features a central courtyard, over which is the main meeting hall for the Assembly. On the roof on the rear of the building is a signature feature of Le Corbusier, a large tower, similar in form to the smokestack of a ship or the ventilation tower of a heating plant. Le Corbusier added touches of colour and texture with an immense tapestry in the meeting hall and a large gateway decorated with enamel. He wrote of this building, "A Palace magnificent in its effect, from the new art of raw concrete. It is magnificent and terrible; terrible meaning that there is nothing cold about it to the eyes."[74]

Later life and work (1955–1965)

The 1950s and 1960s were a difficult period for Le Corbusier's personal life: his wife Yvonne died in 1957 and his mother, to whom he was closely attached, died in 1960. He remained active in a wide variety of fields: in 1955 he published Poéme de l'angle droit, a portfolio of lithographs, published in the same collection as the book Jazz by Henri Matisse. In 1958 he collaborated with the composer Edgar Varèse on a work called Le Poème électronique, a show of sound and light, for the Philips Pavilion at the International Exposition in Brussels. In 1960 he published a new book, L'Atelier de la recherché patiente The workshop of patient research), simultaneously published in four languages. He received growing recognition for his pioneering work in modernist architecture: in 1959 a successful international campaign was launched to have his Villa Savoye, threatened with demolition, declared a historic monument; it was the first time that a work by a living architect had received this distinction. In 1962, in the same year as the dedication of the Palace of the Assembly in Chandigarh, the first retrospective exhibit on his work was held at the National Museum of Modern Art in Paris. In 1964, in a ceremony held in his atelier on rue de Sèvres, he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Légion d'honneur by Culture Minister André Malraux.[75]

His later architectural work was extremely varied and often based on designs of earlier projects. In 1952–1958 he designed a series of tiny holiday cabins, 2.26 by 2.26 by 2.6 metres (7.4 by 7.4 by 8.5 feet) in size, for a site next to the Mediterranean at Roquebrune-Cap-Martin. He built a similar cabin for himself but the rest of the project was not realized until after his death. From 1953–to 1957 he designed a residential building for Brazilian students for the Cité de la Université in Paris. Between 1954 and 1959 he built the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo.[76] His other projects included a cultural centre and stadium for the town of Firminy, where he had built his first housing project (1955–1958), and a stadium in Baghdad, Iraq (much altered since its construction). He also constructed three new Unités d'Habitation apartment blocks on the model of the original in Marseille, the first in Berlin (1956–1958), the second in Briey-en-Forêt in the Meurthe-et-Moselle Department and the third (1959–1967) in Firminy. From 1960–to 1963 he built his only building in the United States, the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts in Cambridge, Massachusetts.[75] Jørn Utzon, the architect of the Sydney Opera House, commissioned Le Corbusier to create furnishings for the nascent opera house. Le Corbusier designed a tapestry, Les Dés Sont Jetés, which was completed in 1960.[77]

Le Corbusier died of a heart attack at age 77 in 1965 after swimming on the French Riviera.[78] At the time of his death several projects were on the drawing board: the church of Saint-Pierre in Firminy, finally completed in modified form in 2006, a Palace of Congresses for Strasbourg (1962–65) and a hospital in Venice (1961–1965), which were never built. Le Corbusier designed an art gallery[79] beside the lake in Zürich for gallery owner Heidi Weber in 1962–1967. Now called the Centre Le Corbusier, it is one of his last finished works.[80]

Estate

 
The holiday cabin where he spent his last days in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin

The Fondation Le Corbusier (FLC) functions as his official estate.[81] The US copyright representative for the Fondation Le Corbusier is the Artists Rights Society.[82]

Ideas

The Five Points of a Modern Architecture

 
Image of Barrio de las Flores, Coruña, Galicia, (Spain), built under the influence of Le Corbusier. [83]

Le Corbusier defined the principles of his new architecture in Les cinq points de l'architecture moderne, published in 1927, and co-authored by his cousin, Pierre Jeanneret. They summarized the lessons he had learned in the previous years, which he put literally into concrete form in his villas constructed in the late 1920s, most dramatically in the Villa Savoye (1928–1931).

The five points are:

  • The Pilotis, or pylon. The building is raised on reinforced concrete pylons, which allows for free circulation on the ground level, and eliminates dark and damp parts of the house.
  • The Roof Terrace. The sloping roof is replaced by a flat roof; the roof can be used as a garden, for promenades, for sports or a swimming pool.
  • The Free Plan. Load-bearing walls are replaced by steel or reinforced concrete columns, so the interior can be freely designed, and interior walls can be put anywhere, or left out entirely. The structure of the building is not visible from the outside.
  • The Ribbon Window. Since the walls do not support the house, the windows can run the entire length of the house, so all rooms can get equal light.
  • The Free Façade. Since the building is supported by columns in the interior, the façade can be much lighter and more open or made entirely of glass. There is no need for lintels or other structures around the windows.

"Architectural Promenade"

The "Architectural Promenade" was another idea dear to Le Corbusier, which he particularly put into play in his design of the Villa Savoye. In 1928, in Une Maison, un Palais, he described it: "Arab architecture gives us a precious lesson: it is best appreciated in walking, on foot. It is in walking, in going from one place to another, that you see develop the features of the architecture. In this house (Villa Savoye) you find a veritable architectural promenade, offering constantly varying aspects, unexpected, sometimes astonishing." The promenade at Villa Savoye, Le Corbusier wrote, both in the interior of the house and on the roof terrace, often erased the traditional difference between the inside and outside.[84]

Ville Radieuse and Urbanism

In the 1930s, Le Corbusier expanded and reformulated his ideas on urbanism, eventually publishing them in La Ville radieuse (The Radiant City) in 1935. Perhaps the most significant difference between the Contemporary City and the Radiant City is that the latter abandoned the class-based stratification of the former; housing was now assigned according to family size, not economic position.[85] Some have read dark overtones into The Radiant City: from the "astonishingly beautiful assemblage of buildings" that was Stockholm, for example, Le Corbusier saw only "frightening chaos and saddening monotony." He dreamed of "cleaning and purging" the city, bringing "a calm and powerful architecture"—referring to steel, plate glass, and reinforced concrete. Although Le Corbusier's designs for Stockholm did not succeed, later architects took his ideas and partly "destroyed" the city with them.[86]

Le Corbusier hoped that politically minded industrialists in France would lead the way with their efficient Taylorist and Fordist strategies adopted from American industrial models to reorganize society. As Norma Evenson has put it, "the proposed city appeared to some an audacious and compelling vision of a brave new world, and to others, a frigid megalomaniacally scaled negation of the familiar urban ambient."[87]

Le Corbusier "His ideas—his urban planning and his architecture—are viewed separately," Perelman noted, "whereas they are the same thing."[88]

In La Ville radieuse, he conceived an essentially apolitical society, in which the bureaucracy of economic administration effectively replaces the state.[89]

Le Corbusier was heavily indebted to the thought of the 19th-century French utopians Saint-Simon and Charles Fourier. There is a noteworthy resemblance between the concept of the unité and Fourier's phalanstery.[90] From Fourier, Le Corbusier adopted at least in part his notion of administrative, rather than political, government.

Modulor

The Modulor was a standard model of the human form which Le Corbusier devised to determine the correct amount of living space needed for residents in his buildings. It was also his rather original way of dealing with differences between the metric system and the British or American system since the Modulor was not attached to either one.

Le Corbusier explicitly used the golden ratio in his Modulor system for the scale of architectural proportion. He saw this system as a continuation of the long tradition of Vitruvius, Leonardo da Vinci's "Vitruvian Man", the work of Leon Battista Alberti, and others who used the proportions of the human body to improve the appearance and function of architecture. In addition to the golden ratio, Le Corbusier based the system on human measurements, Fibonacci numbers, and the double unit. Many scholars see the Modulor as a humanistic expression but it is also argued that: "It's exactly the opposite (...) It's the mathematization of the body, the standardization of the body, the rationalization of the body."[91]

He took Leonardo's suggestion of the golden ratio in human proportions to an extreme: he sectioned his model human body's height at the navel with the two sections in golden ratio, then subdivided those sections in golden ratio at the knees and throat; he used these golden ratio proportions in the Modulor system.

Le Corbusier's 1927 Villa Stein in Garches exemplified the Modulor system's application. The villa's rectangular ground plan, elevation, and inner structure closely approximate golden rectangles.[92]

Le Corbusier placed systems of harmony and proportion at the centre of his design philosophy, and his faith in the mathematical order of the universe was closely bound to the golden section and the Fibonacci series, which he described as "rhythms apparent to the eye and clear in their relations with one another. And these rhythms are at the very root of human activities. They resound in Man by an organic inevitability, the same fine inevitability which causes the tracing out of the Golden Section by children, old men, savages, and the learned."[93]

Open Hand

 
Open Hand Monument in Chandigarh, India

The Open Hand (La Main Ouverte) is a recurring motif in Le Corbusier's architecture, a sign for him of "peace and reconciliation. It is open to give and open to receive." The largest of the many Open Hand sculptures that Le Corbusier created is a 26-meter-high (85 ft) version in Chandigarh, India, known as Open Hand Monument.

Furniture

Le Corbusier was an eloquent critic of the finely crafted, hand-made furniture, made with rare and exotic woods, inlays and coverings, presented at the 1925 Exposition of Decorative Arts. Following his usual method, Le Corbusier first wrote a book with his theories of furniture, complete with memorable slogans. In his 1925 book L'Art Décoratif d'aujourd'hui, he called for furniture that used inexpensive materials and could be mass-produced. Le Corbusier described three different furniture types: type-needs, type-furniture, and human-limb objects. He defined human-limb objects as: "Extensions of our limbs and adapted to human functions that are type-needs and type-functions, therefore type-objects and type-furniture. The human-limb object is a docile servant. A good servant is discreet and self-effacing to leave his master free. Certainly, works of art are tools, beautiful tools. And long live the good taste manifested by choice, subtlety, proportion, and harmony". He further declared: "Chairs are architecture, sofas are bourgeois".[page needed]

 
Frame of an LC4 chair by Le Corbusier and Perriand (1927–28) at Museum of Decorative Arts, Paris

Le Corbusier first relied on ready-made furniture from Thonet to furnish his projects, such as his pavilion at the 1925 Exposition. In 1928, following the publication of his theories, he began experimenting with furniture design. In 1928, he invited the architect Charlotte Perriand to join his studio as a furniture designer. His cousin, Pierre Jeanneret, also collaborated on many of the designs. For the manufacture of his furniture, he turned to the German firm Gebrüder Thonet, which had begun making chairs with tubular steel, a material originally used for bicycles, in the early 1920s. Le Corbusier admired the design of Marcel Breuer and the Bauhaus, who in 1925 had begun making sleek modern tubular club chairs. Mies van der Rohe had begun making his version in a sculptural curved form with a cane seat in 1927.[94]

The first results of the collaboration between Le Corbusier and Perriand were three types of chairs made with chrome-plated tubular steel frames: The LC4, Chaise Longue, (1927–28), with a covering of cowhide, which gave it a touch of exoticism; the Fauteuil Grand Confort (LC3) (1928–29), a club chair with a tubular frame which resembled the comfortable Art Deco club chairs that became popular in the 1920s; and the Fauteuil à dossier vascular (LC4) (1928–29), a low seat suspended in a tubular steel frame, also with cowhide upholstery. These chairs were designed specifically for two of his projects, the Maison la Roche in Paris and a pavilion for Barbara and Henry Church. All three clearly showed the influence of Mies van der Rohe and Marcel Breuer. The line of furniture was expanded with additional designs for Le Corbusier's 1929 Salon d'Automne installation, 'Equipment for the Home'. Despite the intention of Le Corbusier that his furniture should be inexpensive and mass-produced, his pieces were originally costly to make and were not mass-produced until many years later, when he was famous. [95]

Controversies

There is debate over the apparently variable or contradictory nature of Le Corbusier's political views.[96] In the 1920s, he co-founded and contributed articles about urbanism to the fascist journals Plans, Prélude and L'Homme Réel.[97][96] He also penned pieces in favour of Nazi antisemitism for those journals, as well as "hateful editorials".[98] Between 1925 and 1928, Le Corbusier had connections to Le Faisceau, a short-lived French fascist party led by Georges Valois. (Valois later became an anti-fascist.)[99] Le Corbusier knew another former member of Faisceau, Hubert Lagardelle, a former labor leader and syndicalist who had become disaffected with the political left. In 1934, after Lagardelle had obtained a position at the French embassy in Rome, he arranged for Le Corbusier to lecture on architecture in Italy. Lagardelle later served as minister of labor in the pro-Axis Vichy regime. While Le Corbusier sought commissions from the Vichy regime, particularly the redesign of Marseille after its Jewish population had been forcefully removed,[96] he was unsuccessful, and the only appointment he received from it was membership of a committee studying urbanism.[citation needed] Alexis Carrel, a eugenicist surgeon, appointed Le Corbusier to the Department of Bio-Sociology of the Foundation for the Study of Human Problems, an institute promoting eugenics policies under the Vichy regime.[96]

Le Corbusier has been accused of antisemitism. He wrote to his mother in October 1940, as the Vichy government enacted anti-Jewish laws: "The Jews are having a bad time. I occasionally feel sorry. But it appears their blind lust for money has rotted the country." He was also accused of belittling the Muslim population of Algeria, then part of France. When Le Corbusier proposed a plan for the rebuilding of Algiers, he condemned the existing housing for European Algerians, complaining that it was inferior to that inhabited by indigenous Algerians: "the civilized live like rats in holes" while "the barbarians live in solitude, in well-being."[100] His plan for rebuilding Algiers was rejected, and thereafter Le Corbusier mostly avoided politics.[101]

Criticism

Few other 20th-century architects were criticized, or praised, as much as Le Corbusier.[citation needed] In his eulogy to Le Corbusier at the memorial ceremony for the architect in the courtyard of the Louvre on 1 September 1965, French Culture Minister André Malraux declared, "Le Corbusier had some great rivals, but none of them had the same significance in the revolution of architecture, because none bore insults so patiently and for so long."[102]

Later criticism of Le Corbusier was directed at his ideas on urban planning. In 1998, the architectural historian Witold Rybczynski wrote in Time magazine:

"He called it the Ville Radieuse, the Radiant City. Despite the poetic title, his urban vision was authoritarian, inflexible and simplistic. Wherever it was tried—in Chandigarh by Le Corbusier himself or in Brasilia by his followers—it failed. Standardization proved inhuman and disorienting. The open spaces were inhospitable; the bureaucratically imposed plan was socially destructive. In the US, the Radiant City took the form of vast urban-renewal schemes and regimented public housing projects that damaged the urban fabric beyond repair. Today, these megaprojects are being dismantled, as superblocks give way to rows of houses fronting streets and sidewalks. Downtowns have discovered that combining, not separating, different activities is the key to success. So is the presence of lively residential neighbourhoods, old as well as new. Cities have learned that preserving history makes more sense than starting from zero. It has been an expensive lesson, and not one that Le Corbusier intended, but it too is part of his legacy."[103]

Technological historian and architecture critic Lewis Mumford wrote in Yesterday's City of Tomorrow that the extravagant heights of Le Corbusier's skyscrapers had no reason for existence apart from the fact that they had become technological possibilities. The open spaces in his central areas had no reason for existence either, Mumford wrote, since on the scale, he imagined there was no motive during the business day for pedestrian circulation in the office quarter. By "mating utilitarian and financial image of the skyscraper city to the romantic image of the organic environment, Le Corbusier had produced a sterile hybrid."

The public housing projects influenced by his ideas have been criticized for isolating poor communities in monolithic high-rises and breaking the social ties integral to a community's development. One of his most influential detractors has been Jane Jacobs, who delivered a scathing critique of Le Corbusier's urban design theories in her seminal work The Death and Life of Great American Cities.

For some critics, the urbanism of Le Corbusier was the model for a fascist state.[104] These critics cited Le Corbusier himself when he wrote that "not all citizens could become leaders. The technocratic elite, the industrialists, financiers, engineers, and artists would be located in the city centre, while the workers would be removed to the fringes of the city".[105]

Alessandro Hseuh-Bruni wrote in "Le Corbusier's "Fatal Flaws – A Critique of Modernism" that

"In addition to setting the stage for infrastructural developments to come, Le Corbusier's blueprints and models, while not so well-regarded by urban planners and street dwellers alike, also examined the sociological side of cities in great detail. World War II left millions dead and transformed the urban landscape throughout much of Europe, from England to the Soviet Union, and housing on a mass scale was necessary. Le Corbusier personally took this as a challenge to accommodate the masses on an unprecedented scale. This mission statement manifested itself in the form of "Cité Radieuse" (The Radiant City), located in Marseille, France. The construction of this utopian sanctuary was dependent on the destruction of traditional neighbourhoods – he showed no regard for French cultural heritage and tradition. Entire neighbourhoods were ravaged to make way for these dense, uniform concrete blocks. If he had his way, Paris' elite Marais community would have been destroyed. In addition, the theme of segregation that plagued earlier models of Le Corbusier's continued in this supposed utopian vision, with the 5 wealthy elite being the only ones to access the luxuries of modernism."[106]

Influence

 
Gustavo Capanema Palace, Rio de Janeiro (Brazil)

Le Corbusier was concerned about problems he saw in industrial cities at the turn of the 20th century. He thought that industrial housing techniques led to crowding, dirtiness, and a lack of a moral landscape. He was a leader of the modernist movement to create better-living conditions and a better society through housing. Ebenezer Howard's Garden Cities of Tomorrow heavily influenced Le Corbusier and his contemporaries.[107]

Le Corbusier revolutionized urban planning, and was a founding member of the Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM).[108] One of the first to realize how the automobile would change human society, Le Corbusier conceived the city of the future with large apartment buildings isolated in a park-like setting on pilotis. Le Corbusier's plans were adopted by builders of public housing in Europe and the United States. In Great Britain, urban planners turned to Le Corbusier's "Cities in the Sky" as a cheaper method of building public housing from the late 1950s.[109] Le Corbusier criticized any effort at ornamentation of the buildings. The large spartan structures in cities, but not part of it, have been criticized for being boring and unfriendly to pedestrians.[110]

Several of the many architects who worked for Le Corbusier in his studio became prominent, including painter-architect Nadir Afonso, who absorbed Le Corbusier's ideas into his aesthetics theory. Lúcio Costa's city plan of Brasília and the industrial city of Zlín planned by František Lydie Gahura in the Czech Republic are based on his ideas. Le Corbusier's thinking had profound effects on city planning and architecture in the Soviet Union during the Constructivist era.

Le Corbusier harmonized and lent credence to the idea of space as a set of destinations between which mankind moved continuously. He gave credibility to the automobile as a transporter and freeway in urban spaces. His philosophies were useful to urban real estate developers in the American post-World War II period because they justified and lent intellectual support to the desire to raze traditional urban spaces for high density, high-profit urban concentration. The freeways connected this new urbanism to low density, low cost, highly profitable suburban locales available to be developed for middle-class single-family housing.

Missing from this scheme of movement was connectivity between isolated urban villages created for the lower-middle and working classes, and the destination points in Le Corbusier's plan: suburban and rural areas, and urban commercial centres. As designed, the freeways travelled over, at, or beneath grade levels of the living spaces of the urban poor, for example, the Cabrini–Green housing project in Chicago. Because such projects were devoid of freeway-exit ramps and were cut off by freeway rights-of-way, they became isolated from the jobs and services that had been concentrated at Le Corbusier's nodal transportation endpoints.

As jobs migrated to the suburbs, these urban-village dwellers effectively found themselves stranded without freeway-access points in their communities or public mass transit that could economically reach suburban job centres. Late in the post-War period, suburban job centres found labour shortages to be such a critical problem that they sponsored urban-to-suburban shuttle-bus services to fill the vacant working-class and lower-middle-class jobs, which did not typically pay enough to afford car ownership.

Le Corbusier influenced architects and urbanists worldwide. In the United States, Shadrach Woods; in Spain, Francisco Javier Sáenz de Oiza; in Brazil, Oscar Niemeyer; In Mexico, Mario Pani Darqui; in Chile, Roberto Matta; in Argentina, Antoni Bonet i Castellana (a Catalan exile), Juan Kurchan, Jorge Ferrari Hardoy, Amancio Williams, and Clorindo Testa in his first era; in Uruguay, the professors Justino Serralta and Carlos Gómez Gavazzo; in Colombia, Germán Samper Gnecco, Rogelio Salmona, and Dicken Castro; in Peru, Abel Hurtado and José Carlos Ortecho; in Lebanon, Joseph Philippe Karam; in India Shiv Nath Prasad.

Fondation Le Corbusier

 
Le Corbusier, work reproduced in Život 2 (1922)

The Fondation Le Corbusier is a private foundation and archive honoring the work of Le Corbusier. It operates Maison La Roche, a museum located in the 16th arrondissement at 8–10, square du Dr Blanche, Paris, France, which is open daily except for Sunday.

The foundation was established in 1968. It now owns Maison La Roche and Maison Jeanneret (which form the foundation's headquarters), as well as the apartment occupied by Le Corbusier from 1933 to 1965 at rue Nungesser et Coli in Paris 16e, and the "Small House" he built for his parents in Corseaux on the shores of Lac Leman (1924).

Maison La Roche and Maison Jeanneret (1923–24), also known as the La Roche-Jeanneret house, is a pair of semi-detached houses that was Le Corbusier's third commission in Paris. They are laid out at right angles to each other, with iron, concrete, and blank, white façades setting off a curved two-story gallery space. Maison La Roche is now a museum containing about 8,000 original drawings, studies and plans by Le Corbusier (in collaboration with Pierre Jeanneret from 1922 to 1940), as well as about 450 of his paintings, about 30 enamels, about 200 other works on paper, and a sizable collection of written and photographic archives. It describes itself as the world's largest collection of Le Corbusier drawings, studies, and plans.[81][111]

Awards

  • In 1937, Le Corbusier was named Chevalier of the Légion d'honneur. In 1945, he was promoted to Officier of the Légion d'honneur. In 1952, he was promoted to Commandeur of the Légion d'honneur. Finally, on 2 July 1964, Le Corbusier was named Grand Officier of the Légion d'honneur.[1]
  • He received the Frank P. Brown Medal and AIA Gold Medal in 1961.
  • The University of Cambridge awarded Le Corbusier an honorary degree in June 1959.[112]

World Heritage Site

In 2016, seventeen of Le Corbusier's buildings spanning seven countries were identified as UNESCO World Heritage Sites, reflecting "outstanding contribution to the Modern Movement".[113]

Memorials

Le Corbusier's portrait was featured on the 10 Swiss francs banknote, pictured with his distinctive eyeglasses.

The following place-names carry his name:

  • Place Le Corbusier, Paris, near the site of his atelier on the Rue de Sèvres
  • Le Corbusier Boulevard, Laval, Quebec, Canada
  • Place Le Corbusier in his hometown of La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland
  • Le Corbusier Street in the partido of Malvinas Argentinas, Buenos Aires Province, Argentina
  • Le Corbusier Street in Le Village Parisien of Brossard, Quebec, Canada
  • Le Corbusier Promenade, a promenade along the water at Roquebrune-Cap-Martin
  • Le Corbusier Museum, Sector – 19 Chandigarh, India
  • Le Corbusier Museum in Stuttgart am Weissenhof

Works

Books by Le Corbusier

  • 1918: Après le cubisme (After Cubism), with Amédée Ozenfant
  • 1923: Vers une architecture (Towards an Architecture) (frequently mistranslated as "Towards a New Architecture")
  • 1925: Urbanisme (Urbanism)
  • 1925: La Peinture moderne (Modern Painting), with Amédée Ozenfant
  • 1925: L'Art décoratif d'aujourd'hui (The Decorative Arts of Today)
  • 1930: Précisions sur un état présent de l'architecture et de l'urbanisme (Precisions on the present state of architecture and urbanism)
  • 1931: Premier clavier de couleurs (First Color Keyboard)
  • 1935: Aircraft
  • 1935: La Ville radieuse (The Radiant City)
  • 1942: Charte d'Athènes (Athens Charter)
  • 1943: Entretien avec les étudiants des écoles d'architecture (A Conversation with Architecture Students)
  • 1945: Les Trois établissements Humains (The Three Human Establishments)
  • 1948: Le Modulor (The Modulor)
  • 1953: Le Poeme de l'Angle Droit (The Poem of the Right Angle)
  • 1955: Le Modulor 2 (The Modulor 2)
  • 1959: Deuxième clavier de couleurs (Second Colour Keyboard)
  • 1964: Quand les Cathédrales Etáient Blanches (When the Cathedrals were White)
  • 1966: Le Voyage d'Orient (The Voyage to the East)

See also

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  • Curtis, William J.R. (1994) Le Corbusier: Ideas and Forms, Phaidon, ISBN 978-0-7148-2790-2.
  • Fishman, Robert (1982). Urban Utopias in the Twentieth Century: Ebenezer Howard, Frank Lloyd Wright, and Le Corbusier. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-56023-8.
  • Frampton, Kenneth. (2001). Le Corbusier, London, Thames and Hudson.
  • Jencks, Charles (2000) Le Corbusier and the Continual Revolution in Architecture, The Monacelli Press, ISBN 978-1-58093-077-2.
  • Jornod, Naïma and Jornod, Jean-Pierre (2005) Le Corbusier (Charles Edouard Jeanneret), catalogue raisonné de l'oeuvre peint, Skira, ISBN 88-7624-203-1.
  • Journel, Guillemette Morel (2015). Le Corbusier- Construire la Vie Moderne (in French). Editions du Patrimoine: Centre des Monument Nationaux. ISBN 978-2-7577-0419-6.
  • Korolija Fontana-Giusti, Gordana. (2015) 'Transgression and Ekphrasis in Le Corbusier's Journey to the East' in Transgression: Towards the Expanded Field in Architecture, edited by Louis Rice and David Littlefield, London: Routledge, 57–75, ISBN 978-1-13-881892-7.
  • Le Corbusier (1925). L'Art décoratif d'aujourdhui (in French). G. Crés et Cie.
  • Le Corbusier (1923). Vers une architecture (in French). Flammarion (1995). ISBN 978-2-0812-1744-7.
  • Dumont, Marie-Jeanne, ed. (2002). Le Corbusier- Lettres a ses maitres (in French). Editions du Linteau.
  • Solitaire, Marc (2016) Au retour de La Chaux-de-Fonds: Le Corbusier & Froebel, editions Wiking, ISBN 978-2-9545239-1-0.
  • Riley, Noël (2004). Grammaire des Arts Décoratifs (in French). Flammarion.
  • Von Moos, Stanislaus (2009) Le Corbusier: Elements of A Synthesis, Rotterdam, 010 Publishers.
  • Weber, Nicholas Fox (2008) Le Corbusier: A Life, Alfred A. Knopf, ISBN 0-375-41043-0.

External links

  • Le Corbusier architectural drawings, 1935–1961. Held by the Department of Drawings & Archives, Avery Architectural & Fine Arts Library, Columbia University.
  • Fondation Le Corbusier – Official site
  • Projects by Le Corbusier – ArchDaily
  • Le Corbusier's Working Lifestyle: 'Working with Le Corbusier'
  • Plummer, Henry. Cosmos of Light: The Sacred Architecture of Le Corbusier. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2013.
  • "Le Corbusier and the Sun". solarhousehistory.com. 28 October 2013.

corbusier, charles, jeanneret, redirects, here, australian, politician, charles, jeanneret, politician, corbusier, redirects, here, other, uses, term, corbusier, disambiguation, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, . Charles Jeanneret redirects here For the Australian politician see Charles Jeanneret politician Corbusier redirects here For other uses of the term see Corbusier disambiguation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Le Corbusier news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Charles Edouard Jeanneret 6 October 1887 27 August 1965 known as Le Corbusier UK l e k ɔːr ˈ b juː z i eɪ le kor BEW zee ay 2 US l e ˌ k ɔːr b uː ˈ z j eɪ ˈ s j eɪ le KOR boo ZYAY SYAY 3 4 French le kɔʁbyzje 5 was a Swiss French architect designer painter urban planner writer and one of the pioneers of what is now regarded as modern architecture He was born in Switzerland and became a French citizen in 1930 His career spanned five decades and he designed buildings in Europe Japan India and North and South America 6 He considered that the roots of modern architecture are to be found in Viollet le Duc 7 Le CorbusierLe Corbusier in 1964BornCharles Edouard Jeanneret Gris 1 1887 10 06 6 October 1887La Chaux de Fonds Neuchatel SwitzerlandDied27 August 1965 1965 08 27 aged 77 Roquebrune Cap Martin Alpes Maritimes FranceNationalitySwiss FrenchOccupationArchitectAwardsAIA Gold Medal 1961 Grand Officier of the Legion d honneur 1964 BuildingsVilla Savoye PoissyVilla La Roche ParisUnite d habitation Marseille Notre Dame du Haut Ronchamp Buildings in Chandigarh IndiaProjectsVille RadieuseSignatureDedicated to providing better living conditions for the residents of crowded cities Le Corbusier was influential in urban planning and was a founding member of the Congres International d Architecture Moderne CIAM Le Corbusier prepared the master plan for the city of Chandigarh in India and contributed specific designs for several buildings there especially the government buildings On 17 July 2016 seventeen projects by Le Corbusier in seven countries were inscribed in the list of UNESCO World Heritage Sites as The Architectural Work of Le Corbusier an Outstanding Contribution to the Modern Movement 8 Le Corbusier remains a controversial figure Some of his urban planning ideas have been criticized for their indifference to pre existing cultural sites societal expression and equality and his alleged ties with fascism antisemitism eugenics 9 and the dictator Benito Mussolini have resulted in some continuing contention 10 11 12 13 Le Corbusier also designed well known furniture such as the LC4 Chaise Lounge Chair and the ALC 3001 chair Both made with leather with metal framing Contents 1 Early life 1887 1904 2 Travel and first houses 1905 1914 3 Dom ino House and Schwob House 1914 1918 4 Painting Cubism Purism and L Esprit Nouveau 1918 1922 5 Toward an Architecture 1920 1923 6 L Esprit Nouveau Pavilion 1925 7 The Decorative Art of Today 1925 8 Five Points of Architecture to Villa Savoye 1923 1931 9 League of Nations Competition and Pessac Housing Project 1926 1930 9 1 The Cite Fruges 10 Founding of CIAM 1928 and Athens Charter 11 Projects 1928 1963 11 1 Moscow projects 1928 1934 11 2 Cite Universitaire Immeuble Clarte and Cite de Refuge 1928 1933 11 3 Ville Contemporaine Plan Voisin and Cite Radieuse 1922 1939 11 4 World War II and Reconstruction Unite d Habitation in Marseille 1939 1952 11 5 Postwar projects United Nations headquarters 1947 1952 11 6 Religious architecture 1950 1963 11 7 Chandigarh 1951 1956 12 Later life and work 1955 1965 13 Estate 14 Ideas 14 1 The Five Points of a Modern Architecture 14 2 Architectural Promenade 14 3 Ville Radieuse and Urbanism 14 4 Modulor 14 5 Open Hand 15 Furniture 16 Controversies 17 Criticism 18 Influence 19 Fondation Le Corbusier 20 Awards 21 World Heritage Site 22 Memorials 23 Works 24 Books by Le Corbusier 25 See also 26 References 26 1 Sources 27 External linksEarly life 1887 1904 Edit Le Corbusier Charles Edouard Jeanneret 1920 Nature morte Still Life oil on canvas 80 9 cm 99 7 cm 31 9 in 39 3 in Museum of Modern Art New YorkCharles Edouard Jeanneret was born on 6 October 1887 in La Chaux de Fonds a small city in the French speaking Neuchatel canton in north western Switzerland in the Jura mountains 5 kilometres 3 1 mi across the border from France It was an industrial town devoted to manufacturing watches Among the unifying social structures of La Chaux de Fonds was the Loge L Amitie the Masonic lodge with its francophone moral social and philosophical ideas including the symbolic iconography of the right angle rectitude and the compass exactitude Le Corbusier would later describe these as my guide my choice and as his time honored ideas ingrained and deep rooted in the intellect like entries from a catechism 6 He adopted the pseudonym Le Corbusier in 1920 His father was an artisan who enamelled boxes and watches and his mother taught piano His elder brother Albert was an amateur violinist 14 He attended a kindergarten that used Frobelian methods 15 16 17 Like his contemporaries Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies van der Rohe Le Corbusier lacked formal training as an architect He was attracted to the visual arts at the age of fifteen he entered the municipal art school in La Chaux de Fonds which taught the applied arts connected with watchmaking Three years later he attended the higher course of decoration founded by the painter Charles L Eplattenier who had studied in Budapest and Paris Le Corbusier wrote later that L Eplattenier had made him a man of the woods and taught him about painting from nature 14 His father frequently took him into the mountains around the town He wrote later we were constantly on mountaintops we grew accustomed to a vast horizon 18 His architecture teacher in the Art School was architect Rene Chapallaz who had a large influence on Le Corbusier s earliest house designs He reported later that it was the art teacher L Eplattenier who made him choose architecture I had a horror of architecture and architects he wrote I was sixteen I accepted the verdict and I obeyed I moved into architecture 19 Travel and first houses 1905 1914 Edit Le Corbusier s student project the Villa Fallet a chalet in La Chaux de Fonds Switzerland 1905 The Maison Blanche built for Le Corbusier s parents in La Chaux de Fonds 1912 Open interior of the Maison Blanche 1912 The Villa Favre Jacot in Le Locle Switzerland 1912 Le Corbusier began teaching himself by going to the library to read about architecture and philosophy visiting museums sketching buildings and constructing them In 1905 he and two other students under the supervision of their teacher Rene Chapallaz designed and built his first house the Villa Fallet for the engraver Louis Fallet a friend of his teacher Charles L Eplattenier Located on the forested hillside near Chaux de fonds it was a large chalet with a steep roof in the local alpine style and carefully crafted coloured geometric patterns on the facade The success of this house led to his construction of two similar houses the Villas Jacquemet and Stotzer in the same area 20 In September 1907 he made his first trip outside of Switzerland going to Italy then that winter travelling through Budapest to Vienna where he stayed for four months and met Gustav Klimt and tried without success to meet Josef Hoffmann 21 In Florence he visited the Florence Charterhouse in Galluzzo which made a lifelong impression on him I would have liked to live in one of what they called their cells he wrote later It was the solution for a unique kind of worker s housing or rather for a terrestrial paradise 22 He travelled to Paris and for fourteen months between 1908 and 1910 he worked as a draftsman in the office of the architect Auguste Perret the pioneer of the use of reinforced concrete in residential construction and the architect of the Art Deco landmark Theatre des Champs Elysees Two years later between October 1910 and March 1911 he travelled to Germany and worked for four months in the office Peter Behrens where Mies van der Rohe and Walter Gropius were also working and learning 23 In 1911 he travelled again with his friend August Klipstein for five months 24 this time he journeyed to the Balkans and visited Serbia Bulgaria Turkey Greece as well as Pompeii and Rome filling nearly 80 sketchbooks with renderings of what he saw including many sketches of the Parthenon whose forms he would later praise in his work Vers une architecture 1923 He spoke of what he saw during this trip in many of his books and it was the subject of his last book Le Voyage d Orient 23 In 1912 he began his most ambitious project a new house for his parents also located on the forested hillside near La Chaux de Fonds The Jeanneret Perret house was larger than the others and in a more innovative style the horizontal planes contrasted dramatically with the steep alpine slopes and the white walls and lack of decoration were in sharp contrast with the other buildings on the hillside The interior spaces were organized around the four pillars of the salon in the centre foretelling the open interiors he would create in his later buildings The project was more expensive to build than he imagined his parents were forced to move from the house within ten years and relocate to a more modest house However it led to a commission to build an even more imposing villa in the nearby village of Le Locle for a wealthy watch manufacturer Georges Favre Jacot Le Corbusier designed the new house in less than a month The building was carefully designed to fit its hillside site and the interior plan was spacious and designed around a courtyard for maximum light a significant departure from the traditional house 25 Dom ino House and Schwob House 1914 1918 Edit Charles Edouard Jeanneret 1914 15 Maison Dom Ino Dom ino House During World War I Le Corbusier taught at his old school in La Chaux de Fonds He concentrated on theoretical architectural studies using modern techniques 26 In December 1914 along with the engineer Max Dubois he began a serious study of the use of reinforced concrete as a building material He had first discovered concrete working in the office of Auguste Perret the pioneer of reinforced concrete architecture in Paris but now wanted to use it in new ways Reinforced concrete provided me with incredible resources he wrote later and variety and a passionate plasticity in which by themselves my structures will be the rhythm of a palace and a Pompieen tranquillity 27 This led him to his plan for the Dom Ino House 1914 15 This model proposed an open floor plan consisting of three concrete slabs supported by six thin reinforced concrete columns with a stairway providing access to each level on one side of the floor plan 28 The system was originally designed to provide large numbers of temporary residences after World War I producing only slabs columns and stairways and residents could build exterior walls with the materials around the site He described it in his patent application as a juxtiposable system of construction according to an infinite number of combinations of plans This would permit he wrote the construction of the dividing walls at any point on the facade or the interior The Anatole Schwob House in La Chaux de Fonds 1916 1918 Under this system the structure of the house did not have to appear on the outside but could be hidden behind a glass wall and the interior could be arranged in any way the architect liked 29 After it was patented Le Corbusier designed several houses according to the system which was all white concrete boxes Although some of these were never built they illustrated his basic architectural ideas which would dominate his works throughout the 1920s He refined the idea in his 1927 book on the Five Points of a New Architecture This design which called for the disassociation of the structure from the walls and the freedom of plans and facades became the foundation for most of his architecture over the next ten years 30 In August 1916 Le Corbusier received his largest commission ever to construct a villa for the Swiss watchmaker Anatole Schwob for whom he had already completed several small remodelling projects He was given a large budget and the freedom to design not only the house but also to create the interior decoration and choose the furniture Following the precepts of Auguste Perret he built the structure out of reinforced concrete and filled the gaps with brick The centre of the house is a large concrete box with two semicolumn structures on both sides which reflects his ideas of pure geometrical forms A large open hall with a chandelier occupied the centre of the building You can see he wrote to Auguste Perret in July 1916 that Auguste Perret left more in me than Peter Behrens 31 Le Corbusier s grand ambitions collided with the ideas and budget of his client and led to bitter conflicts Schwob went to court and denied Le Corbusier access to the site or the right to claim to be the architect Le Corbusier responded Whether you like it or not my presence is inscribed in every corner of your house Le Corbusier took great pride in the house and reproduced pictures in several of his books 32 Painting Cubism Purism and L Esprit Nouveau 1918 1922 Edit Le Corbusier 1921 Nature morte Still Life oil on canvas 54 x 81 cm Musee National d Art Moderne Paris Le Corbusier 1922 Nature morte verticale Vertical Still Life oil on canvas 146 3 cm 89 3 cm 57 6 by 35 2 inches Kunstmuseum Basel Le Corbusier 1920 Guitare verticale 2eme version oil on canvas 100 cm 81 cm 39 in 32 in Fondation Le Corbusier ParisLe Corbusier moved to Paris definitively in 1917 and began his architectural practise with his cousin Pierre Jeanneret 1896 1967 a partnership that would last until the 1950s with an interruption in the World War II years 33 In 1918 Le Corbusier met the Cubist painter Amedee Ozenfant in whom he recognised a kindred spirit Ozenfant encouraged him to paint and the two began a period of collaboration Rejecting Cubism as irrational and romantic the pair jointly published their manifesto Apres le cubisme and established a new artistic movement Purism Ozenfant and Le Corbusier began writing for a new journal L Esprit Nouveau and promoted with energy and imagination his ideas of architecture In the first issue of the journal in 1920 Charles Edouard Jeanneret adopted Le Corbusier an altered form of his maternal grandfather s name Lecorbesier as a pseudonym reflecting his belief that anyone could reinvent themselves 34 35 Adopting a single name to identify oneself was in vogue by artists in many fields during that era especially in Paris Between 1918 and 1922 Le Corbusier did not build anything concentrating his efforts on Purist theory and painting In 1922 he and his cousin Pierre Jeanneret opened a studio in Paris at 35 rue de Sevres 26 They set up an architectural practice together From 1927 to 1937 they worked together with Charlotte Perriand at the Le Corbusier Pierre Jeanneret studio 36 In 1929 the trio prepared the House fittings section for the Decorative Artists Exhibition and asked for a group stand renewing and widening the 1928 avant garde group idea This was refused by the Decorative Artists Committee They resigned and founded the Union of Modern Artists Union des artistes modernes UAM His theoretical studies soon advanced into several different single family house models Among these was the Maison Citrohan The project s name was a reference to the French Citroen automaker for the modern industrial methods and materials Le Corbusier advocated using in the house s construction as well as how he intended the homes would be consumed similar to other commercial products like the automobile 37 As part of the Maison Citrohan model Le Corbusier proposed a three floor structure with a double height living room bedrooms on the second floor and a kitchen on the third floor The roof would be occupied by a sun terrace On the exterior Le Corbusier installed a stairway to provide second floor access from the ground level Here as in other projects from this period he also designed the facades to include large uninterrupted banks of windows The house used a rectangular plan with exterior walls that were not filled by windows but left as white stuccoed spaces Le Corbusier and Jeanneret left the interior aesthetically spare with any movable furniture made of tubular metal frames Light fixtures usually comprised single bare bulbs Interior walls also were left white Toward an Architecture 1920 1923 EditIn 1922 and 1923 Le Corbusier devoted himself to advocating his new concepts of architecture and urban planning in a series of polemical articles published in L Esprit Nouveau At the Paris Salon d Automne in 1922 he presented his plan for the Ville Contemporaine a model city for three million people whose residents would live and work in a group of identical sixty story tall apartment buildings surrounded by lower zig zag apartment blocks and a large park In 1923 he collected his essays from L Esprit Nouveau published his first and most influential book Towards an Architecture He presented his ideas for the future of architecture in a series of maxims declarations and exhortations pronouncing that a grand epoch has just begun There exists a new spirit There already exist a crowd of works in the new spirit they are found especially in industrial production Architecture is suffocating in its current uses Styles are a lie Style is a unity of principles which animates all the work of a period and which result in a characteristic spirit Our epoch determines each day its style Our eyes unfortunately don t know how to see it yet and his most famous maxim A house is a machine to live in Most of the many photographs and drawings in the book came from outside the world of traditional architecture the cover showed the promenade deck of an ocean liner while others showed racing cars aeroplanes factories and the huge concrete and steel arches of zeppelin hangars 38 L Esprit Nouveau Pavilion 1925 Edit The Pavilion of the Esprit Nouveau 1925 The model of the Plan Voisin for the reconstruction of Paris displayed at the Pavilion of the Esprit NouveauAn important early work of Le Corbusier was the Esprit Nouveau Pavilion built for the 1925 Paris International Exhibition of Modern Decorative and Industrial Arts the event which later gave Art Deco its name Le Corbusier built the pavilion in collaboration with Amedee Ozenfant and with his cousin Pierre Jeanneret Le Corbusier and Ozenfant had broken with Cubism and formed the Purism movement in 1918 and in 1920 founded their journal L Esprit Nouveau In his new journal Le Corbusier vividly denounced the decorative arts Decorative Art as opposed to the machine phenomenon is the final twitch of the old manual modes a dying thing To illustrate his ideas he and Ozenfant decided to create a small pavilion at the Exposition representing his idea of the future urban housing unit A house he wrote is a cell within the body of a city The cell is made up of the vital elements which are the mechanics of a house Decorative art is antistandardizational Our pavilion will contain only standard things created by industry in factories and mass produced objects truly of the style of today my pavilion will therefore be a cell extracted from a huge apartment building 39 Le Corbusier and his collaborators were given a plot of land located behind the Grand Palais in the centre of the Exposition The plot was forested and exhibitors could not cut down trees so Le Corbusier built his pavilion with a tree in the centre emerging through a hole in the roof The building was a stark white box with an interior terrace and square glass windows The interior was decorated with a few cubist paintings and a few pieces of mass produced commercially available furniture entirely different from the expensive one of a kind pieces in the other pavilions The chief organizers of the Exposition were furious and built a fence to partially hide the pavilion Le Corbusier had to appeal to the Ministry of Fine Arts which ordered that fence be taken down 39 Besides the furniture the pavilion exhibited a model of his Plan Voisin his provocative plan for rebuilding a large part of the centre of Paris He proposed to bulldoze a large area north of the Seine and replace the narrow streets monuments and houses with giant sixty story cruciform towers placed within an orthogonal street grid and park like green space His scheme was met with criticism and scorn from French politicians and industrialists although they were favourable to the ideas of Taylorism and Fordism underlying his designs The plan was never seriously considered but it provoked discussion concerning how to deal with the overcrowded poor working class neighbourhoods of Paris and it later saw the partial realization in the housing developments built in the Paris suburbs in the 1950s and 1960s The Pavilion was ridiculed by many critics but Le Corbusier undaunted wrote Right now one thing is sure 1925 marks the decisive turning point in the quarrel between the old and new After 1925 the antique lovers will have virtually ended their lives Progress is achieved through experimentation the decision will be awarded on the field of battle of the new 40 The Decorative Art of Today 1925 EditIn 1925 Le Corbusier combined a series of articles about decorative art from L Esprit Nouveau into a book L art decoratif d aujourd hui The Decorative Art of Today 41 42 The book was a spirited attack on the very idea of decorative art His basic premise repeated throughout the book was Modern decorative art has no decoration 43 He attacked with enthusiasm the styles presented at the 1925 Exposition of Decorative Arts The desire to decorate everything about one is a false spirit and an abominable small perversion The religion of beautiful materials is in its final death agony The almost hysterical onrush in recent years toward this quasi orgy of decor is only the last spasm of a death already predictable 44 He cited the 1912 book of the Austrian architect Adolf Loos Ornament and crime and quoted Loos s dictum The more a people are cultivated the more decor disappears He attacked the deco revival of classical styles what he called Louis Philippe and Louis XVI moderne he condemned the symphony of color at the Exposition and called it the triumph of assemblers of colors and materials They were swaggering in colors They were making stews out of fine cuisine He condemned the exotic styles presented at the Exposition based on the art of China Japan India and Persia It takes energy today to affirm our western styles He criticized the precious and useless objects that accumulated on the shelves in the new style He attacked the rustling silks the marbles which twist and turn the vermilion whiplashes the silver blades of Byzantium and the Orient Let s be done with it 45 Why call bottles chairs baskets and objects decorative Le Corbusier asked They are useful tools The decor is not necessary Art is necessary He declared that in the future the decorative arts industry would produce only objects which are perfectly useful convenient and have a true luxury which pleases our spirit by their elegance and the purity of their execution and the efficiency of their services This rational perfection and precise determinate creates the link sufficient to recognize a style He described the future of decoration in these terms The idea is to go work in the superb office of a modern factory rectangular and well lit painted in white Ripolin a major French paint manufacturer where healthy activity and laborious optimism reign He concluded by repeating Modern decoration has no decoration 45 The book became a manifesto for those who opposed the more traditional styles of the decorative arts In the 1930s as Le Corbusier predicted the modernized versions of Louis Philippe and Louis XVI furniture and the brightly coloured wallpapers of stylized roses were replaced by a more sober more streamlined style Gradually the modernism and functionality proposed by Le Corbusier overtook the more ornamental style The shorthand titles that Le Corbusier used in the book 1925 Expo Arts Deco were adapted in 1966 by the art historian Bevis Hillier for a catalogue of an exhibition on the style and in 1968 in the title of a book Art Deco of the 20s and 30s And thereafter the term Art Deco was commonly used as the name of the style 46 Five Points of Architecture to Villa Savoye 1923 1931 EditMain articles Villa Savoye and Le Corbusier s Five Points of Architecture The Villa La Roche Jeanneret now Fondation Le Corbusier in Paris 1923 Corbusier Haus right and Citrohan Haus in Weissenhof Stuttgart Germany 1927 The Villa Savoye in Poissy 1928 1931 The notoriety that Le Corbusier achieved from his writings and the Pavilion at the 1925 Exposition led to commissions to build a dozen residences in Paris and the Paris region in his purist style These included the Maison La Roche Albert Jeanneret 1923 1925 which now houses the Fondation Le Corbusier the Maison Guiette in Antwerp Belgium 1926 a residence for Jacques Lipchitz the Maison Cook and the Maison Planeix In 1927 he was invited by the German Werkbund to build three houses in the model city of Weissenhof near Stuttgart based on the Citroen House and other theoretical models he had published He described this project in detail in one of his best known essays the Five Points of Architecture 47 The following year he began the Villa Savoye 1928 1931 which became one of the most famous of Le Corbusier s works and an icon of modernist architecture Located in Poissy in a landscape surrounded by trees and a large lawn the house is an elegant white box poised on rows of slender pylons surrounded by a horizontal band of windows which fill the structure with light The service areas parking rooms for servants and laundry room are located under the house Visitors enter a vestibule from which a gentle ramp leads to the house itself The bedrooms and salons of the house are distributed around a suspended garden the rooms look both out at the landscape and into the garden which provides additional light and air Another ramp leads up to the roof and a stairway leads down to the cellar under the pillars Villa Savoye succinctly summed up the five points of architecture that he had elucidated in L Esprit Nouveau and the book Vers une architecture which he had been developing throughout the 1920s First Le Corbusier lifted the bulk of the structure off the ground supporting it by pilotis reinforced concrete stilts These pilotis in providing the structural support for the house allowed him to elucidate his next two points a free facade meaning non supporting walls that could be designed as the architect wished and an open floor plan meaning that the floor space was free to be configured into rooms without concern for supporting walls The second floor of the Villa Savoye includes long strips of ribbon windows that allow unencumbered views of the large surrounding garden which constitute the fourth point of his system The fifth point was the roof garden to compensate for the green area consumed by the building and replace it on the roof A ramp rising from ground level to the third floor roof terrace allows for a promenade architecturale through the structure The white tubular railing recalls the industrial ocean liner aesthetic that Le Corbusier much admired Le Corbusier was quite rhapsodic when describing the house in Precisions in 1930 the plan is pure exactly made for the needs of the house It has its correct place in the rustic landscape of Poissy It is Poetry and lyricism supported by technique 48 The house had its problems the roof persistently leaked due to construction faults but it became a landmark of modern architecture and one of the best known works of Le Corbusier 48 League of Nations Competition and Pessac Housing Project 1926 1930 EditThanks to his passionate articles in L Esprit Nouveau his participation in the 1925 Decorative Arts Exposition and the conferences he gave on the new spirit of architecture Le Corbusier had become well known in the architectural world though he had only built residences for wealthy clients In 1926 he entered the competition for the construction of a headquarters for the League of Nations in Geneva with a plan for an innovative lakeside complex of modernist white concrete office buildings and meeting halls There were 337 projects in competition It appeared that the Corbusier s project was the first choice of the architectural jury but after much behind the scenes manoeuvring the jury declared it was unable to pick a single winner and the project was given instead to the top five architects who were all neoclassicists Le Corbusier was not discouraged he presented his plans to the public in articles and lectures to show the opportunity that the League of Nations had missed 49 The Cite Fruges Edit Main article Cite Fruges de Pessac In 1926 Le Corbusier received the opportunity he had been looking for he was commissioned by a Bordeaux industrialist Henry Fruges a fervent admirer of his ideas on urban planning to build a complex of worker housing the Cite Fruges at Pessac a suburb of Bordeaux Le Corbusier described Pessac as A little like a Balzac novel a chance to create a whole community for living and working The Fruges quarter became his first laboratory for residential housing a series of rectangular blocks composed of modular housing units located in a garden setting Like the unit displayed at the 1925 Exposition each housing unit had its own small terrace The earlier villas he constructed all had white exterior walls but for Pessac at the request of his clients he added colour panels of brown yellow and jade green coordinated by Le Corbusier Originally planned to have some two hundred units it finally contained about fifty to seventy housing units in eight buildings Pessac became the model on a small scale for his later and much larger Cite Radieuse projects 50 Founding of CIAM 1928 and Athens Charter EditIn 1928 Le Corbusier took a major step toward establishing modernist architecture as the dominant European style Le Corbusier had met with many of the leading German and Austrian modernists during the competition for the League of Nations in 1927 In the same year the German Werkbund organized an architectural exposition at the Weissenhof Estate Stuttgart Seventeen leading modernist architects in Europe were invited to design twenty one houses Le Corbusier and Mies van der Rohe played a major part In 1927 Le Corbusier Pierre Chareau and others proposed the foundation of an international conference to establish the basis for a common style The first meeting of the Congres Internationaux d Architecture Moderne or International Congresses of Modern Architects CIAM was held in a chateau on Lake Leman in Switzerland 26 28 June 1928 Those attending included Le Corbusier Robert Mallet Stevens Auguste Perret Pierre Chareau and Tony Garnier from France Victor Bourgeois from Belgium Walter Gropius Erich Mendelsohn Ernst May and Mies van der Rohe from Germany Josef Frank from Austria Mart Stam and Gerrit Rietveld from the Netherlands and Adolf Loos from Czechoslovakia A delegation of Soviet architects was invited to attend but they were unable to obtain visas Later members included Josep Lluis Sert of Spain and Alvar Aalto of Finland No one attended from the United States A second meeting was organized in 1930 in Brussels by Victor Bourgeois on the topic Rational methods for groups of habitations A third meeting on The functional city was scheduled for Moscow in 1932 but was cancelled at the last minute Instead the delegates held their meeting on a cruise ship travelling between Marseille and Athens Onboard they together drafted a text on how modern cities should be organized The text called The Athens Charter after considerable editing by Le Corbusier and others was finally published in 1943 and became an influential text for city planners in the 1950s and 1960s The group met once more in Paris in 1937 to discuss public housing and was scheduled to meet in the United States in 1939 but the meeting was cancelled because of the war The legacy of the CIAM was a roughly common style and doctrine which helped define modern architecture in Europe and the United States after World War II 51 Projects 1928 1963 EditMoscow projects 1928 1934 Edit Main article Le Corbusier in the USSR Building of the Tsentrosoyuz headquarters of Soviet trade unions Moscow 1928 34 Le Corbusier saw the new society founded in the Soviet Union after the Russian Revolution as a promising laboratory for his architectural ideas He met the Russian architect Konstantin Melnikov during the 1925 Decorative Arts Exposition in Paris and admired the construction of Melnikov s constructivist USSR pavilion the only truly modernist building in the Exposition other than his own Esprit Nouveau pavilion At Melnikov s invitation he travelled to Moscow where he found that his writings had been published in Russian he gave lectures and interviews and between 1928 and 1932 he constructed an office building for the Tsentrosoyuz the headquarters of Soviet trade unions In 1932 he was invited to take part in an international competition for the new Palace of the Soviets in Moscow which was to be built on the site of the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour demolished on Stalin s orders Le Corbusier contributed a highly original plan a low level complex of circular and rectangular buildings and a rainbow like arch from which the roof of the main meeting hall was suspended To Le Corbusier s distress his plan was rejected by Stalin in favour of a plan for a massive neoclassical tower the highest in Europe crowned with a statue of Vladimir Lenin The Palace was never built construction was stopped by World War II a swimming pool took its place and after the collapse of the USSR the cathedral was rebuilt on its original site 52 Cite Universitaire Immeuble Clarte and Cite de Refuge 1928 1933 Edit The Immeuble Clarte in Geneva 1930 1932 Between 1928 and 1934 as Le Corbusier s reputation grew he received commissions to construct a wide variety of buildings In 1928 he received a commission from the Soviet government to construct the headquarters of the Tsentrosoyuz or central office of trade unions a large office building whose glass walls alternated with plaques of stone He built the Villa de Madrot in Le Pradet 1929 1931 and an apartment in Paris for Charles de Bestigui at the top of an existing building on the Champs Elysees 1929 1932 later demolished In 1929 1930 he constructed a floating homeless shelter for the Salvation Army on the left bank of the Seine at the Pont d Austerlitz Between 1929 and 1933 he built a larger and more ambitious project for the Salvation Army the Cite de Refuge on rue Cantagrel in the 13th arrondissement of Paris He also constructed the Swiss Pavilion in the Cite Universitaire in Paris with 46 units of student housing 1929 33 He designed furniture to go with the building the main salon was decorated with a montage of black and white photographs of nature In 1948 he replaced this with a colourful mural he painted himself In Geneva he built a glass walled apartment building with 45 units the Immeuble Clarte Between 1931 and 1945 he built an apartment building with fifteen units including an apartment and studio for himself on the 6th and 7th floors at 24 rue Nungesser et Coli in the 16th arrondissement in Paris overlooking the Bois de Boulogne 53 His apartment and studio are owned today by the Fondation Le Corbusier and can be visited Ville Contemporaine Plan Voisin and Cite Radieuse 1922 1939 Edit See also Unite d habitation and Ville Radieuse As the global Great Depression enveloped Europe Le Corbusier devoted more and more time to his ideas for urban design and planned cities He believed that his new modern architectural forms would provide an organizational solution that would raise the quality of life for the working classes In 1922 he had presented his model of the Ville Contemporaine a city of three million inhabitants at the Salon d Automne in Paris His plan featured tall office towers surrounded by lower residential blocks in a park setting He reported that analysis leads to such dimensions to such a new scale and to such the creation of an urban organism so different from those that exist that it that the mind can hardly imagine it 54 The Ville Contemporaine presenting an imaginary city in an imaginary location did not attract the attention that Le Corbusier wanted For his next proposal the Plan Voisin 1925 he took a much more provocative approach he proposed to demolish a large part of central Paris and replace it with a group of sixty story cruciform office towers surrounded by parkland This idea shocked most viewers as it was certainly intended to do The plan included a multi level transportation hub that included depots for buses and trains as well as highway intersections and an airport Le Corbusier had the fanciful notion that commercial airliners would land between the huge skyscrapers He segregated pedestrian circulation paths from the roadways and created an elaborate road network Groups of lower rise zigzag apartment blocks set back from the street were interspersed among the office towers Le Corbusier wrote The centre of Paris currently threatened with death threatened by exodus is in reality a diamond mine To abandon the centre of Paris to its fate is to desert in face of the enemy 55 As no doubt Le Corbusier expected no one hurried to implement the Plan Voisin but he continued working on variations of the idea and recruiting followers In 1929 he travelled to Brazil where he gave conferences on his architectural ideas He returned with drawings of his vision for Rio de Janeiro he sketched serpentine multi story apartment buildings on pylons like inhabited highways winding through Rio de Janeiro In 1931 he developed a visionary plan for another city Algiers then part of France This plan like his Rio Janeiro plan called for the construction of an elevated viaduct of concrete carrying residential units which would run from one end of the city to the other This plan unlike his early Plan Voisin was more conservative because it did not call for the destruction of the old city of Algiers the residential housing would be over the top of the old city This plan like his Paris plans provoked discussion but never came close to realization In 1935 Le Corbusier made his first visit to the United States He was asked by American journalists what he thought about New York City skyscrapers he responded characteristically that he found them much too small 56 He wrote a book describing his experiences in the States Quand Les cathedrales etaient blanches Voyage au pays des timides When Cathedrals were White voyage to the land of the timid whose title expressed his view of the lack of boldness in American architecture 57 He wrote a great deal but built very little in the late 1930s The titles of his books expressed the combined urgency and optimism of his messages Cannons Munitions No thank you Lodging please 1938 and The lyricism of modern times and urbanism 1939 In 1928 the French Minister of Labour Louis Loucheur won the passage of French law on public housing calling for the construction of 260 000 new housing units within five years Le Corbusier immediately began to design a new type of modular housing unit which he called the Maison Loucheur which would be suitable for the project These units were forty five square metres 480 square feet in size made with metal frames and were designed to be mass produced and then transported to the site where they would be inserted into frameworks of steel and stone The government insisted on stone walls to win the support of local building contractors The standardisation of apartment buildings was the essence of what Le Corbusier termed the Ville Radieuse or radiant city in a new book published in 1935 The Radiant City was similar to his earlier Contemporary City and Plan Voisin with the difference that residences would be assigned by family size rather than by income and social position In his 1935 book he developed his ideas for a new kind of city where the principal functions heavy industry manufacturing habitation and commerce would be separated into their neighbourhoods carefully planned and designed However before any units could be built World War II intervened World War II and Reconstruction Unite d Habitation in Marseille 1939 1952 Edit The modular design of the apartments inserted into the building Internal street within the Unite d Habitation Marseille 1947 1952 Salon and Terrace of an original unit of the Unite d Habitation now at the Cite de l Architecture et du Patrimoine in Paris 1952 During the War and the German occupation of France Le Corbusier did his best to promote his architectural projects He moved to Vichy for a time where the collaborationist government of Marshal Philippe Petain was located offering his services for architectural projects including his plan for the reconstruction of Algiers but they were rejected He continued writing completing Sur les Quatres routes On the Four Routes in 1941 After 1942 Le Corbusier left Vichy for Paris 58 He became for a time a technical adviser at Alexis Carrel s eugenics foundation but resigned on 20 April 1944 59 In 1943 he founded a new association of modern architects and builders the Ascoral the Assembly of Constructors for a renewal of architecture but there were no projects to build 60 When the war ended Le Corbusier was nearly sixty years old and he had not had a single project realized for ten years He tried without success to obtain commissions for several of the first large reconstruction projects but his proposals for the reconstruction of the town of Saint Die and for La Rochelle were rejected Still he persisted and finally found a willing partner in Raoul Dautry the new Minister of Reconstruction and Town Planning Dautry agreed to fund one of his projects a Unite habitation de grandeur conforme or housing units of standard size with the first one to be built in Marseille which had been heavily damaged during the war 61 This was his first public commission and was a breakthrough for Le Corbusier He gave the building the name of his pre war theoretical project the Cite Radieuse and followed the principles that he had studied before the war proposing a giant reinforced concrete framework into which modular apartments would fit like bottles into a bottle rack Like the Villa Savoye the structure was poised on concrete pylons though because of the shortage of steel to reinforce the concrete the pylons were more massive than usual The building contained 337 duplex apartment modules to house a total of 1 600 people Each module was three storeys high and contained two apartments combined so each had two levels see diagram above The modules ran from one side of the building to the other and each apartment had a small terrace at each end They were ingeniously fitted together like pieces of a Chinese puzzle with a corridor slotted through the space between the two apartments in each module Residents had a choice of twenty three different configurations for the units Le Corbusier designed furniture carpets and lamps to go with the building all purely functional the only decoration was a choice of interior colours The only mildly decorative features of the building were the ventilator shafts on the roof which Le Corbusier made to look like the smokestacks of an ocean liner a functional form that he admired The building was designed not just to be a residence but to offer all the services needed for living On every third floor between the modules there was a wide corridor like an interior street which ran the length of the building This served as a sort of commercial street with shops eating places a nursery school and recreational facilities A running track and small stage for theatre performances were located on the roof The building itself was surrounded by trees and a small park Le Corbusier wrote later that the Unite d Habitation concept was inspired by the visit he had made to the Florence Charterhouse at Galluzzo in Italy in 1907 and 1910 during his early travels He wanted to recreate he wrote an ideal place for meditation and contemplation He also learned from the monastery he wrote that standardization led to perfection and that all of his life a man labours under this impulse to make the home the temple of the family 62 The Unite d Habitation marked a turning point in the career of Le Corbusier in 1952 he was made a Commander of the Legion d Honneur in a ceremony held on the roof of his new building He had progressed from being an outsider and critic of the architectural establishment to its centre as the most prominent French architect 63 Postwar projects United Nations headquarters 1947 1952 Edit The headquarters of the United Nations designed by Le Corbusier Oscar Niemeyer and Wallace K Harrison 1947 1952 Le Corbusier made another almost identical Unite d Habitation in Reze les Nantes in the Loire Atlantique Department between 1948 and 1952 and three more over the following years in Berlin Briey en Foret and Firminy and he designed a factory for the company of Claude and Duval in Saint Die in the Vosges In the post Second World War decades Le Corbusier s fame moved beyond architectural and planning circles as he became one of the leading intellectual figures of the time 64 In early 1947 Le Corbusier submitted a design for the headquarters of the United Nations which was to be built beside the East River in New York Instead of competition the design was to be selected by a Board of Design Consultants composed of leading international architects nominated by member governments including Le Corbusier Oscar Niemeyer of Brazil Howard Robertson from Britain Nikolai Bassov of the Soviet Union and five others from around the world The committee was under the direction of the American architect Wallace K Harrison who was also the architect for the Rockefeller family which had donated the site for the building Le Corbusier had submitted his plan for the Secretariat called Plan 23 of the 58 submitted In Le Corbusier s plan offices council chambers and General Assembly Hall were in a single block in the centre of the site He lobbied hard for his project and asked the younger Brazilian architect Niemeyer to support and assist him with his plan Niemeyer to help Le Corbusier refused to submit his design and did not attend the meetings until the Director Harrison insisted Niemeyer then submitted his plan Plan 32 with the office building and councils and General Assembly in separate buildings After much discussion the Committee chose Niemeyer s plan but suggested that he collaborate with Le Corbusier on the final project Le Corbusier urged Niemeyer to put the General Assembly Hall in the centre of the site though this would eliminate Niemeyer s plan to have a large plaza in the centre Niemeyer agreed with Le Corbusier s suggestion and the headquarters was built with minor modifications according to their joint plan 65 Religious architecture 1950 1963 Edit The chapel of Notre Dame du Haut in Ronchamp 1950 1955 The convent of Sainte Marie de La Tourette near Lyon 1953 1960 Meeting room inside the Convent of Sainte Marie de la Tourette Church of Saint Pierre Firminy 1960 2006 Le Corbusier was an avowed atheist but he also had a strong belief in the ability of architecture to create a sacred and spiritual environment In the postwar years he designed two important religious buildings the chapel of Notre Dame du Haut at Ronchamp 1950 1955 and the Convent of Sainte Marie de La Tourette 1953 1960 Le Corbusier wrote later that he was greatly aided in his religious architecture by a Dominican father Pere Couturier who had founded a movement and review of modern religious art Le Corbusier first visited the remote mountain site of Ronchamp in May 1950 saw the ruins of the old chapel and drew sketches of possible forms He wrote afterwards In building this chapel I wanted to create a place of silence of peace of prayer of interior joy The feeling of the sacred animated our effort Some things are sacred others aren t whether they re religious or not 66 The second major religious project undertaken by Le Corbusier was the Convent of Sainte Marie de La Tourette in L Arbresle in the Rhone Department 1953 1960 Once again it was Father Couturier who engaged Le Corbusier in the project He invited Le Corbusier to visit the starkly simple and imposing 12th 13th century Le Thoronet Abbey in Provence and also used his memories of his youthful visit to the Erna Charterhouse in Florence This project involved not only a chapel but a library refectory rooms for meetings and reflection and dormitories for the nuns For the living space he used the same Modulor concept for measuring the ideal living space that he had used in the Unite d Habitation in Marseille height under the ceiling of 2 26 metres 7 feet 5 inches and width 1 83 metres 6 feet 0 inches 67 Le Corbusier used raw concrete to construct the convent which is placed on the side of a hill The three blocks of dormitories are U closed by the chapel with a courtyard in the centre The Convent has a flat roof and is placed on sculpted concrete pillars Each of the residential cells has a small loggia with a concrete sunscreen looking out at the countryside The centrepiece of the convent is the chapel a plain box of concrete which he called his Box of miracles Unlike the highly finished facade of the Unite d Habitation the facade of the chapel is raw unfinished concrete He described the building in a letter to Albert Camus in 1957 I m taken with the idea of a box of miracles as the name indicates it is a rectangular box made of concrete It doesn t have any of the traditional theatrical tricks but the possibility as its name suggests to make miracles 68 The interior of the chapel is extremely simple only benches in a plain unfinished concrete box with light coming through a single square in the roof and six small bands on the sides The Crypt beneath has intense blue red and yellow walls and illumination by sunlight channelled from above The monastery has other unusual features including floor to ceiling panels of glass in the meeting rooms window panels that fragmented the view into pieces and a system of concrete and metal tubes like gun barrels which aimed sunlight through coloured prisms and projected it onto the walls of the sacristy and to the secondary altars of the crypt on the level below These were whimsically termed the machine guns of the sacristy and the light cannons of the crypt 69 In 1960 Le Corbusier began a third religious building the Church of Saint Pierre in the new town of Firminy Vert where he had built a Unite d Habitation and a cultural and sports centre While he made the original design construction did not begin until five years after his death and work continued under different architects until it was completed in 2006 The most spectacular feature of the church is the sloping concrete tower that covers the entire interior similar to that in the Assembly Building in his complex at Chandigarh Windows high in the tower illuminates the interior Le Corbusier originally proposed that tiny windows also project the form of a constellation on the walls Later architects designed the church to project the constellation Orion 70 Chandigarh 1951 1956 Edit The High Court of Justice Chandigarh 1951 1956 Secretariat Building Chandigarh 1952 1958 Palace of Assembly Chandigarh 1952 1961 Le Corbusier s largest and most ambitious project was the design of Chandigarh the capital city of the Punjab and Haryana States of India created after India received independence in 1947 Le Corbusier was contacted in 1950 by Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and invited to propose a project An American architect Albert Mayer had made a plan in 1947 for a city of 150 000 inhabitants but the Indian government wanted a grander and more monumental city Corbusier worked on the plan with two British specialists in urban design and tropical climate architecture Maxwell Fry and Jane Drew and with his cousin Pierre Jeanneret who moved to India and supervised the construction until his death Le Corbusier as always was rhapsodic about his project It will be a city of trees he wrote of flowers and water of houses as simple as those at the time of Homer and of a few splendid edifices of the highest level of modernism where the rules of mathematics will reign 71 His plan called for residential commercial and industrial areas along with parks and transportation infrastructure In the middle was the capitol a complex of four major government buildings the Palace of the National Assembly the High Court of Justice the Palace of Secretariat of Ministers and the Palace of the Governor For financial and political reasons the Palace of the Governor was dropped well into the construction of the city throwing the final project somewhat off balance 72 From the beginning Le Corbusier worked as he reported Like a forced labourer He dismissed the earlier American plan as Faux Moderne and overly filled with parking spaces and roads He intended to present what he had learned in forty years of urban study and also to show the French government the opportunities they had missed in not choosing him to rebuild French cities after the War 72 His design made use of many of his favourite ideas an architectural promenade incorporating the local landscape and the sunlight and shadows into the design the use of the Modulor to give a correct human scale to each element and his favourite symbol the open hand The hand is open to give and to receive He placed a monumental open hand statue in a prominent place in the design 72 Le Corbusier s design called for the use of raw concrete whose surface was not smoothed or polished and which showed the marks of the forms in which it dried Pierre Jeanneret wrote to his cousin that he was in a continual battle with the construction workers who could not resist the urge to smooth and finish the raw concrete particularly when important visitors were coming to the site At one point one thousand workers were employed on the site of the High Court of Justice Le Corbusier wrote to his mother It is an architectural symphony which surpasses all my hopes which flashes and develops under the light in a way which is unimaginable and unforgettable From far from up close it provokes astonishment all made with raw concrete and a cement cannon Adorable and grandiose In all the centuries no one has seen that 73 The High Court of Justice begun in 1951 was finished in 1956 The building was radical in its design a parallelogram topped with an inverted parasol Along the walls were high concrete grills 1 5 metres 4 feet 11 inches thick which served as sunshades The entry featured a monumental ramp and columns that allowed the air to circulate The pillars were originally white limestone but in the 1960s they were repainted in bright colours which better resisted the weather 72 The Secretariat the largest building that housed the government offices was constructed between 1952 and 1958 It is an enormous block 250 metres 820 feet long and eight levels high served by a ramp which extends from the ground to the top level The ramp was designed to be partly sculptural and partly practical Since there were no modern building cranes at the time of construction the ramp was the only way to get materials to the top of the construction site The Secretariat had two features which were borrowed from his design for the Unite d Habitation in Marseille concrete grill sunscreens over the windows and a roof terrace 72 The most important building of the capitol complex was the Palace of Assembly 1952 61 which faced the High Court at the other end of a five hundred meter esplanade with a large reflecting pool in the front This building features a central courtyard over which is the main meeting hall for the Assembly On the roof on the rear of the building is a signature feature of Le Corbusier a large tower similar in form to the smokestack of a ship or the ventilation tower of a heating plant Le Corbusier added touches of colour and texture with an immense tapestry in the meeting hall and a large gateway decorated with enamel He wrote of this building A Palace magnificent in its effect from the new art of raw concrete It is magnificent and terrible terrible meaning that there is nothing cold about it to the eyes 74 Later life and work 1955 1965 Edit The National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo 1954 1959 Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts in Cambridge Massachusetts 1960 1963 The Centre Le Corbusier in Zurich 1962 1967 The 1950s and 1960s were a difficult period for Le Corbusier s personal life his wife Yvonne died in 1957 and his mother to whom he was closely attached died in 1960 He remained active in a wide variety of fields in 1955 he published Poeme de l angle droit a portfolio of lithographs published in the same collection as the book Jazz by Henri Matisse In 1958 he collaborated with the composer Edgar Varese on a work called Le Poeme electronique a show of sound and light for the Philips Pavilion at the International Exposition in Brussels In 1960 he published a new book L Atelier de la recherche patiente The workshop of patient research simultaneously published in four languages He received growing recognition for his pioneering work in modernist architecture in 1959 a successful international campaign was launched to have his Villa Savoye threatened with demolition declared a historic monument it was the first time that a work by a living architect had received this distinction In 1962 in the same year as the dedication of the Palace of the Assembly in Chandigarh the first retrospective exhibit on his work was held at the National Museum of Modern Art in Paris In 1964 in a ceremony held in his atelier on rue de Sevres he was awarded the Grand Cross of the Legion d honneur by Culture Minister Andre Malraux 75 His later architectural work was extremely varied and often based on designs of earlier projects In 1952 1958 he designed a series of tiny holiday cabins 2 26 by 2 26 by 2 6 metres 7 4 by 7 4 by 8 5 feet in size for a site next to the Mediterranean at Roquebrune Cap Martin He built a similar cabin for himself but the rest of the project was not realized until after his death From 1953 to 1957 he designed a residential building for Brazilian students for the Cite de la Universite in Paris Between 1954 and 1959 he built the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo 76 His other projects included a cultural centre and stadium for the town of Firminy where he had built his first housing project 1955 1958 and a stadium in Baghdad Iraq much altered since its construction He also constructed three new Unites d Habitation apartment blocks on the model of the original in Marseille the first in Berlin 1956 1958 the second in Briey en Foret in the Meurthe et Moselle Department and the third 1959 1967 in Firminy From 1960 to 1963 he built his only building in the United States the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts in Cambridge Massachusetts 75 Jorn Utzon the architect of the Sydney Opera House commissioned Le Corbusier to create furnishings for the nascent opera house Le Corbusier designed a tapestry Les Des Sont Jetes which was completed in 1960 77 Le Corbusier died of a heart attack at age 77 in 1965 after swimming on the French Riviera 78 At the time of his death several projects were on the drawing board the church of Saint Pierre in Firminy finally completed in modified form in 2006 a Palace of Congresses for Strasbourg 1962 65 and a hospital in Venice 1961 1965 which were never built Le Corbusier designed an art gallery 79 beside the lake in Zurich for gallery owner Heidi Weber in 1962 1967 Now called the Centre Le Corbusier it is one of his last finished works 80 Estate Edit The holiday cabin where he spent his last days in Roquebrune Cap MartinThe Fondation Le Corbusier FLC functions as his official estate 81 The US copyright representative for the Fondation Le Corbusier is the Artists Rights Society 82 Ideas EditThe Five Points of a Modern Architecture Edit Main article Le Corbusier s Five Points of Architecture Image of Barrio de las Flores Coruna Galicia Spain built under the influence of Le Corbusier 83 Le Corbusier defined the principles of his new architecture in Les cinq points de l architecture moderne published in 1927 and co authored by his cousin Pierre Jeanneret They summarized the lessons he had learned in the previous years which he put literally into concrete form in his villas constructed in the late 1920s most dramatically in the Villa Savoye 1928 1931 The five points are The Pilotis or pylon The building is raised on reinforced concrete pylons which allows for free circulation on the ground level and eliminates dark and damp parts of the house The Roof Terrace The sloping roof is replaced by a flat roof the roof can be used as a garden for promenades for sports or a swimming pool The Free Plan Load bearing walls are replaced by steel or reinforced concrete columns so the interior can be freely designed and interior walls can be put anywhere or left out entirely The structure of the building is not visible from the outside The Ribbon Window Since the walls do not support the house the windows can run the entire length of the house so all rooms can get equal light The Free Facade Since the building is supported by columns in the interior the facade can be much lighter and more open or made entirely of glass There is no need for lintels or other structures around the windows Architectural Promenade Edit The Architectural Promenade was another idea dear to Le Corbusier which he particularly put into play in his design of the Villa Savoye In 1928 in Une Maison un Palais he described it Arab architecture gives us a precious lesson it is best appreciated in walking on foot It is in walking in going from one place to another that you see develop the features of the architecture In this house Villa Savoye you find a veritable architectural promenade offering constantly varying aspects unexpected sometimes astonishing The promenade at Villa Savoye Le Corbusier wrote both in the interior of the house and on the roof terrace often erased the traditional difference between the inside and outside 84 Ville Radieuse and Urbanism Edit In the 1930s Le Corbusier expanded and reformulated his ideas on urbanism eventually publishing them in La Ville radieuse The Radiant City in 1935 Perhaps the most significant difference between the Contemporary City and the Radiant City is that the latter abandoned the class based stratification of the former housing was now assigned according to family size not economic position 85 Some have read dark overtones into The Radiant City from the astonishingly beautiful assemblage of buildings that was Stockholm for example Le Corbusier saw only frightening chaos and saddening monotony He dreamed of cleaning and purging the city bringing a calm and powerful architecture referring to steel plate glass and reinforced concrete Although Le Corbusier s designs for Stockholm did not succeed later architects took his ideas and partly destroyed the city with them 86 Le Corbusier hoped that politically minded industrialists in France would lead the way with their efficient Taylorist and Fordist strategies adopted from American industrial models to reorganize society As Norma Evenson has put it the proposed city appeared to some an audacious and compelling vision of a brave new world and to others a frigid megalomaniacally scaled negation of the familiar urban ambient 87 Le Corbusier His ideas his urban planning and his architecture are viewed separately Perelman noted whereas they are the same thing 88 In La Ville radieuse he conceived an essentially apolitical society in which the bureaucracy of economic administration effectively replaces the state 89 Le Corbusier was heavily indebted to the thought of the 19th century French utopians Saint Simon and Charles Fourier There is a noteworthy resemblance between the concept of the unite and Fourier s phalanstery 90 From Fourier Le Corbusier adopted at least in part his notion of administrative rather than political government Modulor Edit Main article Modulor The Modulor was a standard model of the human form which Le Corbusier devised to determine the correct amount of living space needed for residents in his buildings It was also his rather original way of dealing with differences between the metric system and the British or American system since the Modulor was not attached to either one Le Corbusier explicitly used the golden ratio in his Modulor system for the scale of architectural proportion He saw this system as a continuation of the long tradition of Vitruvius Leonardo da Vinci s Vitruvian Man the work of Leon Battista Alberti and others who used the proportions of the human body to improve the appearance and function of architecture In addition to the golden ratio Le Corbusier based the system on human measurements Fibonacci numbers and the double unit Many scholars see the Modulor as a humanistic expression but it is also argued that It s exactly the opposite It s the mathematization of the body the standardization of the body the rationalization of the body 91 He took Leonardo s suggestion of the golden ratio in human proportions to an extreme he sectioned his model human body s height at the navel with the two sections in golden ratio then subdivided those sections in golden ratio at the knees and throat he used these golden ratio proportions in the Modulor system Le Corbusier s 1927 Villa Stein in Garches exemplified the Modulor system s application The villa s rectangular ground plan elevation and inner structure closely approximate golden rectangles 92 Le Corbusier placed systems of harmony and proportion at the centre of his design philosophy and his faith in the mathematical order of the universe was closely bound to the golden section and the Fibonacci series which he described as rhythms apparent to the eye and clear in their relations with one another And these rhythms are at the very root of human activities They resound in Man by an organic inevitability the same fine inevitability which causes the tracing out of the Golden Section by children old men savages and the learned 93 Open Hand Edit Open Hand Monument in Chandigarh IndiaThe Open Hand La Main Ouverte is a recurring motif in Le Corbusier s architecture a sign for him of peace and reconciliation It is open to give and open to receive The largest of the many Open Hand sculptures that Le Corbusier created is a 26 meter high 85 ft version in Chandigarh India known as Open Hand Monument Furniture EditMain article Le Corbusier s Furniture Le Corbusier was an eloquent critic of the finely crafted hand made furniture made with rare and exotic woods inlays and coverings presented at the 1925 Exposition of Decorative Arts Following his usual method Le Corbusier first wrote a book with his theories of furniture complete with memorable slogans In his 1925 book L Art Decoratif d aujourd hui he called for furniture that used inexpensive materials and could be mass produced Le Corbusier described three different furniture types type needs type furniture and human limb objects He defined human limb objects as Extensions of our limbs and adapted to human functions that are type needs and type functions therefore type objects and type furniture The human limb object is a docile servant A good servant is discreet and self effacing to leave his master free Certainly works of art are tools beautiful tools And long live the good taste manifested by choice subtlety proportion and harmony He further declared Chairs are architecture sofas are bourgeois page needed Frame of an LC4 chair by Le Corbusier and Perriand 1927 28 at Museum of Decorative Arts ParisLe Corbusier first relied on ready made furniture from Thonet to furnish his projects such as his pavilion at the 1925 Exposition In 1928 following the publication of his theories he began experimenting with furniture design In 1928 he invited the architect Charlotte Perriand to join his studio as a furniture designer His cousin Pierre Jeanneret also collaborated on many of the designs For the manufacture of his furniture he turned to the German firm Gebruder Thonet which had begun making chairs with tubular steel a material originally used for bicycles in the early 1920s Le Corbusier admired the design of Marcel Breuer and the Bauhaus who in 1925 had begun making sleek modern tubular club chairs Mies van der Rohe had begun making his version in a sculptural curved form with a cane seat in 1927 94 The first results of the collaboration between Le Corbusier and Perriand were three types of chairs made with chrome plated tubular steel frames The LC4 Chaise Longue 1927 28 with a covering of cowhide which gave it a touch of exoticism the Fauteuil Grand Confort LC3 1928 29 a club chair with a tubular frame which resembled the comfortable Art Deco club chairs that became popular in the 1920s and the Fauteuil a dossier vascular LC4 1928 29 a low seat suspended in a tubular steel frame also with cowhide upholstery These chairs were designed specifically for two of his projects the Maison la Roche in Paris and a pavilion for Barbara and Henry Church All three clearly showed the influence of Mies van der Rohe and Marcel Breuer The line of furniture was expanded with additional designs for Le Corbusier s 1929 Salon d Automne installation Equipment for the Home Despite the intention of Le Corbusier that his furniture should be inexpensive and mass produced his pieces were originally costly to make and were not mass produced until many years later when he was famous 95 Controversies EditThere is debate over the apparently variable or contradictory nature of Le Corbusier s political views 96 In the 1920s he co founded and contributed articles about urbanism to the fascist journals Plans Prelude and L Homme Reel 97 96 He also penned pieces in favour of Nazi antisemitism for those journals as well as hateful editorials 98 Between 1925 and 1928 Le Corbusier had connections to Le Faisceau a short lived French fascist party led by Georges Valois Valois later became an anti fascist 99 Le Corbusier knew another former member of Faisceau Hubert Lagardelle a former labor leader and syndicalist who had become disaffected with the political left In 1934 after Lagardelle had obtained a position at the French embassy in Rome he arranged for Le Corbusier to lecture on architecture in Italy Lagardelle later served as minister of labor in the pro Axis Vichy regime While Le Corbusier sought commissions from the Vichy regime particularly the redesign of Marseille after its Jewish population had been forcefully removed 96 he was unsuccessful and the only appointment he received from it was membership of a committee studying urbanism citation needed Alexis Carrel a eugenicist surgeon appointed Le Corbusier to the Department of Bio Sociology of the Foundation for the Study of Human Problems an institute promoting eugenics policies under the Vichy regime 96 Le Corbusier has been accused of antisemitism He wrote to his mother in October 1940 as the Vichy government enacted anti Jewish laws The Jews are having a bad time I occasionally feel sorry But it appears their blind lust for money has rotted the country He was also accused of belittling the Muslim population of Algeria then part of France When Le Corbusier proposed a plan for the rebuilding of Algiers he condemned the existing housing for European Algerians complaining that it was inferior to that inhabited by indigenous Algerians the civilized live like rats in holes while the barbarians live in solitude in well being 100 His plan for rebuilding Algiers was rejected and thereafter Le Corbusier mostly avoided politics 101 Criticism EditFew other 20th century architects were criticized or praised as much as Le Corbusier citation needed In his eulogy to Le Corbusier at the memorial ceremony for the architect in the courtyard of the Louvre on 1 September 1965 French Culture Minister Andre Malraux declared Le Corbusier had some great rivals but none of them had the same significance in the revolution of architecture because none bore insults so patiently and for so long 102 Later criticism of Le Corbusier was directed at his ideas on urban planning In 1998 the architectural historian Witold Rybczynski wrote in Time magazine He called it the Ville Radieuse the Radiant City Despite the poetic title his urban vision was authoritarian inflexible and simplistic Wherever it was tried in Chandigarh by Le Corbusier himself or in Brasilia by his followers it failed Standardization proved inhuman and disorienting The open spaces were inhospitable the bureaucratically imposed plan was socially destructive In the US the Radiant City took the form of vast urban renewal schemes and regimented public housing projects that damaged the urban fabric beyond repair Today these megaprojects are being dismantled as superblocks give way to rows of houses fronting streets and sidewalks Downtowns have discovered that combining not separating different activities is the key to success So is the presence of lively residential neighbourhoods old as well as new Cities have learned that preserving history makes more sense than starting from zero It has been an expensive lesson and not one that Le Corbusier intended but it too is part of his legacy 103 Technological historian and architecture critic Lewis Mumford wrote in Yesterday s City of Tomorrow that the extravagant heights of Le Corbusier s skyscrapers had no reason for existence apart from the fact that they had become technological possibilities The open spaces in his central areas had no reason for existence either Mumford wrote since on the scale he imagined there was no motive during the business day for pedestrian circulation in the office quarter By mating utilitarian and financial image of the skyscraper city to the romantic image of the organic environment Le Corbusier had produced a sterile hybrid The public housing projects influenced by his ideas have been criticized for isolating poor communities in monolithic high rises and breaking the social ties integral to a community s development One of his most influential detractors has been Jane Jacobs who delivered a scathing critique of Le Corbusier s urban design theories in her seminal work The Death and Life of Great American Cities For some critics the urbanism of Le Corbusier was the model for a fascist state 104 These critics cited Le Corbusier himself when he wrote that not all citizens could become leaders The technocratic elite the industrialists financiers engineers and artists would be located in the city centre while the workers would be removed to the fringes of the city 105 Alessandro Hseuh Bruni wrote in Le Corbusier s Fatal Flaws A Critique of Modernism that In addition to setting the stage for infrastructural developments to come Le Corbusier s blueprints and models while not so well regarded by urban planners and street dwellers alike also examined the sociological side of cities in great detail World War II left millions dead and transformed the urban landscape throughout much of Europe from England to the Soviet Union and housing on a mass scale was necessary Le Corbusier personally took this as a challenge to accommodate the masses on an unprecedented scale This mission statement manifested itself in the form of Cite Radieuse The Radiant City located in Marseille France The construction of this utopian sanctuary was dependent on the destruction of traditional neighbourhoods he showed no regard for French cultural heritage and tradition Entire neighbourhoods were ravaged to make way for these dense uniform concrete blocks If he had his way Paris elite Marais community would have been destroyed In addition the theme of segregation that plagued earlier models of Le Corbusier s continued in this supposed utopian vision with the 5 wealthy elite being the only ones to access the luxuries of modernism 106 Influence EditThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Le Corbusier news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Gustavo Capanema Palace Rio de Janeiro Brazil Le Corbusier was concerned about problems he saw in industrial cities at the turn of the 20th century He thought that industrial housing techniques led to crowding dirtiness and a lack of a moral landscape He was a leader of the modernist movement to create better living conditions and a better society through housing Ebenezer Howard s Garden Cities of Tomorrow heavily influenced Le Corbusier and his contemporaries 107 Le Corbusier revolutionized urban planning and was a founding member of the Congres International d Architecture Moderne CIAM 108 One of the first to realize how the automobile would change human society Le Corbusier conceived the city of the future with large apartment buildings isolated in a park like setting on pilotis Le Corbusier s plans were adopted by builders of public housing in Europe and the United States In Great Britain urban planners turned to Le Corbusier s Cities in the Sky as a cheaper method of building public housing from the late 1950s 109 Le Corbusier criticized any effort at ornamentation of the buildings The large spartan structures in cities but not part of it have been criticized for being boring and unfriendly to pedestrians 110 Several of the many architects who worked for Le Corbusier in his studio became prominent including painter architect Nadir Afonso who absorbed Le Corbusier s ideas into his aesthetics theory Lucio Costa s city plan of Brasilia and the industrial city of Zlin planned by Frantisek Lydie Gahura in the Czech Republic are based on his ideas Le Corbusier s thinking had profound effects on city planning and architecture in the Soviet Union during the Constructivist era Le Corbusier harmonized and lent credence to the idea of space as a set of destinations between which mankind moved continuously He gave credibility to the automobile as a transporter and freeway in urban spaces His philosophies were useful to urban real estate developers in the American post World War II period because they justified and lent intellectual support to the desire to raze traditional urban spaces for high density high profit urban concentration The freeways connected this new urbanism to low density low cost highly profitable suburban locales available to be developed for middle class single family housing Missing from this scheme of movement was connectivity between isolated urban villages created for the lower middle and working classes and the destination points in Le Corbusier s plan suburban and rural areas and urban commercial centres As designed the freeways travelled over at or beneath grade levels of the living spaces of the urban poor for example the Cabrini Green housing project in Chicago Because such projects were devoid of freeway exit ramps and were cut off by freeway rights of way they became isolated from the jobs and services that had been concentrated at Le Corbusier s nodal transportation endpoints As jobs migrated to the suburbs these urban village dwellers effectively found themselves stranded without freeway access points in their communities or public mass transit that could economically reach suburban job centres Late in the post War period suburban job centres found labour shortages to be such a critical problem that they sponsored urban to suburban shuttle bus services to fill the vacant working class and lower middle class jobs which did not typically pay enough to afford car ownership Le Corbusier influenced architects and urbanists worldwide In the United States Shadrach Woods in Spain Francisco Javier Saenz de Oiza in Brazil Oscar Niemeyer In Mexico Mario Pani Darqui in Chile Roberto Matta in Argentina Antoni Bonet i Castellana a Catalan exile Juan Kurchan Jorge Ferrari Hardoy Amancio Williams and Clorindo Testa in his first era in Uruguay the professors Justino Serralta and Carlos Gomez Gavazzo in Colombia German Samper Gnecco Rogelio Salmona and Dicken Castro in Peru Abel Hurtado and Jose Carlos Ortecho in Lebanon Joseph Philippe Karam in India Shiv Nath Prasad Fondation Le Corbusier Edit Le Corbusier work reproduced in Zivot 2 1922 The Fondation Le Corbusier is a private foundation and archive honoring the work of Le Corbusier It operates Maison La Roche a museum located in the 16th arrondissement at 8 10 square du Dr Blanche Paris France which is open daily except for Sunday The foundation was established in 1968 It now owns Maison La Roche and Maison Jeanneret which form the foundation s headquarters as well as the apartment occupied by Le Corbusier from 1933 to 1965 at rue Nungesser et Coli in Paris 16e and the Small House he built for his parents in Corseaux on the shores of Lac Leman 1924 Maison La Roche and Maison Jeanneret 1923 24 also known as the La Roche Jeanneret house is a pair of semi detached houses that was Le Corbusier s third commission in Paris They are laid out at right angles to each other with iron concrete and blank white facades setting off a curved two story gallery space Maison La Roche is now a museum containing about 8 000 original drawings studies and plans by Le Corbusier in collaboration with Pierre Jeanneret from 1922 to 1940 as well as about 450 of his paintings about 30 enamels about 200 other works on paper and a sizable collection of written and photographic archives It describes itself as the world s largest collection of Le Corbusier drawings studies and plans 81 111 Awards EditIn 1937 Le Corbusier was named Chevalier of the Legion d honneur In 1945 he was promoted to Officier of the Legion d honneur In 1952 he was promoted to Commandeur of the Legion d honneur Finally on 2 July 1964 Le Corbusier was named Grand Officier of the Legion d honneur 1 He received the Frank P Brown Medal and AIA Gold Medal in 1961 The University of Cambridge awarded Le Corbusier an honorary degree in June 1959 112 World Heritage Site EditIn 2016 seventeen of Le Corbusier s buildings spanning seven countries were identified as UNESCO World Heritage Sites reflecting outstanding contribution to the Modern Movement 113 Memorials EditLe Corbusier s portrait was featured on the 10 Swiss francs banknote pictured with his distinctive eyeglasses The following place names carry his name Place Le Corbusier Paris near the site of his atelier on the Rue de Sevres Le Corbusier Boulevard Laval Quebec Canada Place Le Corbusier in his hometown of La Chaux de Fonds Switzerland Le Corbusier Street in the partido of Malvinas Argentinas Buenos Aires Province Argentina Le Corbusier Street in Le Village Parisien of Brossard Quebec Canada Le Corbusier Promenade a promenade along the water at Roquebrune Cap Martin Le Corbusier Museum Sector 19 Chandigarh India Le Corbusier Museum in Stuttgart am WeissenhofWorks EditMain article List of Le Corbusier buildings 1923 Villa La Roche Paris France 1925 Villa Jeanneret Paris France 1926 Cite Fruges Pessac France 1928 Villa Savoye Poissy sur Seine France 1929 Cite du Refuge Armee du Salut Paris France 1931 Palace of the Soviets Moscow USSR project 1931 Immeuble Clarte Geneva Switzerland 1933 Tsentrosoyuz Moscow USSR 1947 1952 Unite d Habitation Marseille France 1949 1952 United Nations headquarters New York City U S Consultant 1949 1953 Curutchet House La Plata Argentina project manager Amancio Williams 1950 1954 Chapelle Notre Dame du Haut Ronchamp France 1951 Maisons Jaoul Neuilly sur Seine France 1951 Buildings in Ahmedabad India 1951 Sanskar Kendra Museum Ahmedabad 1951 ATMA House 1951 Villa Sarabhai Ahmedabad 1951 Villa Shodhan Ahmedabad 1951 Villa of Chinubhai Chimanlal Ahmedabad 1952 Unite d Habitation of Nantes Reze Nantes France 1952 1959 Buildings in Chandigarh India 1952 Palace of Justice 1952 Museum and Gallery of Art 1953 Secretariat Building 1953 Governor s Palace 1955 Palace of Assembly 1959 Government College of Art GCA and the Chandigarh College of Architecture CCA 1957 Maison du Bresil Cite Universitaire Paris France 1957 1960 Sainte Marie de La Tourette near Lyon France with Iannis Xenakis 1957 Unite d Habitation of Berlin Charlottenburg Flatowallee 16 Berlin Germany 1962 Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University Cambridge Massachusetts U S 1964 1969 Firminy Vert France 1964 Unite d Habitation of Firminy Vert 1965 Maison de la Culture de Firminy 1967 Heidi Weber Museum Centre Le Corbusier Zurich SwitzerlandBooks by Le Corbusier Edit1918 Apres le cubisme After Cubism with Amedee Ozenfant 1923 Vers une architecture Towards an Architecture frequently mistranslated as Towards a New Architecture 1925 Urbanisme Urbanism 1925 La Peinture moderne Modern Painting with Amedee Ozenfant 1925 L Art decoratif d aujourd hui The Decorative Arts of Today 1930 Precisions sur un etat present de l architecture et de l urbanisme Precisions on the present state of architecture and urbanism 1931 Premier clavier de couleurs First Color Keyboard 1935 Aircraft 1935 La Ville radieuse The Radiant City 1942 Charte d Athenes Athens Charter 1943 Entretien avec les etudiants des ecoles d architecture A Conversation with Architecture Students 1945 Les Trois etablissements Humains The Three Human Establishments 1948 Le Modulor The Modulor 1953 Le Poeme de l Angle Droit The Poem of the Right Angle 1955 Le Modulor 2 The Modulor 2 1959 Deuxieme clavier de couleurs Second Colour Keyboard 1964 Quand les Cathedrales Etaient Blanches When the Cathedrals were White 1966 Le Voyage d Orient The Voyage to the East See also EditButterfly roof Crystal Cubism Mathematics and art Raoul Albert La Roche Swiss donator and collector of art References Edit a b Ministere de la Culture et de la Communication Archives nationales site de Fontainebleau Legion d honneur recipient birth certificate Culture gouv fr Retrieved on 27 February 2018 Le Corbusier Lexico UK English Dictionary Oxford University Press Archived from the original on 26 January 2022 Le Corbusier The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 5th ed HarperCollins Retrieved 16 August 2019 Corbusier Le Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 16 August 2019 Steve Rose on Le Corbusier one of the most iconic architects of the 20th century the Guardian 16 July 2008 Retrieved 25 May 2021 a b Birksted Ian 2009 Le Corbusier and the Occult Cambridge Mass MIT Press ISBN 9780262026482 Froissart Rossella 2011 Avant garde et tradition dans les arts du decor en France Lectures critiques autour de Guillaume Janneau PDF in French Universite de Provence Aix Marseille p 73 The Architectural Work of Le Corbusier an Outstanding Contribution to the Modern Movement Retrieved 14 October 2016 Lopez Duran Fabiola 11 December 2018 Eugenics in the Garden Transatlantic Architecture and the Crafting of Modernity By Fabiola Lopez Duran ISBN 978 1 4773 1495 1 BBC Four A History of Art in Three Colours White BBC Retrieved 25 May 2021 The profound anti Semitism of Le Corbusier Haaretz Retrieved 25 May 2021 Donadio Rachel 12 July 2015 Le Corbusier s Architecture and His Politics Are Revisited The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 25 May 2021 Antliff Mark Avant Garde Fascism The Mobilization of Myth Art and Culture in France 1909 1939 a b Journel 2015 p 32 Marc Solitaire Le Corbusier et l urbain la rectification du damier froebelien pp 93 117 Actes du colloque La ville et l urbanisme apres Le Corbusier editions d en Haut 1993 ISBN 2 88251 033 0 Marc Solitaire Le Corbusier entre Raphael et Frobel pp 9 27 Journal d histoire de l architecture N 1 Presses universitaires de Grenoble 1988 ISBN 2 7061 0325 6 Le Corbusier L Art decoratif d aujourdhui 1925 p 198 Cited by Jean Petit Le Corbusier lui meme Rousseau Geneva 1970 p 28 Journel 2015 p 49 Journel 2015 p 48 Letter to Eplattenier in Dumont Le Corbusier Lettres a ses maitres vol 2 pp 82 83 a b Journel 2015 pp 32 33 Zaknic Ivan 2019 Klip and Corb on the road Zurich Scheidegger amp Spiess ISBN 978 3 85881 817 1 Journel 2015 pp 48 9 a b Choay Francoise 1960 Le Corbusier George Braziller Inc pp 10 11 ISBN 978 0 8076 0104 4 Letter to Auguste Perret 1915 cited in Lettres a ces Maitres vol 1 p 33 Tim Benton Les Villas de Le Corbusier 1920 1929 Philippe Sers ed Paris 1987 cited by Turner Paul La Formation de Le Corbusier Paris Macula 1987 p 218 Journel 2015 p 50 51 cited in Lettres a css maitres vol 1 p 181 Journel 2015 p 50 Larousse Editions Encyclopedie Larousse en ligne Charles Edouard Jeanneret dit Le Corbusier larousse fr Corbusier Le Jenger Jean 1 January 2002 Le Corbusier choix de lettres Springer Science amp Business Media ISBN 978 3 7643 6455 7 via Google Books Reperes biographiques Fondation Le Corbusier Archived 2 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Fondationlecorbusier asso fr Retrieved on 27 February 2018 Office du Patrimoine et des sites 2016 Le Corbusier amp Pierre Jeanneret Restoration of the Clarte Building Geneva Birkhauser p 27 ISBN 978 3 0356 0759 8 Ken Kuma 2008 Anti object the dissolution and disintegration of architecture Architectural Association Great Britain London Architectural Association ISBN 978 1 902902 52 4 OCLC 67375498 Le Corbusier 1923 pp 1 150 a b Arwas 1992 p 46 Arwas 1992 p 49 Le Corbusier L Art decoratif d aujourd hui Paris G Cres L Esprit nouveau 1925 Reedition Yannis Tsiomis Le Corbusier L Art decoratif d aujourd hui et la loi du ripolin Presses universitaires de Paris Nanterre 2012 Le Corbusier L art decoratif d aujourd hui originally 1925 Flammarion edition of 1996 ISBN 978 2 0812 2062 1 Le Corbusier p 98 a b Le Corbusier 1925 p 70 81 Benton Charlotte Benton Tim Wood Ghislaine Art Deco dans le monde 1910 39 2010 Renaissance du Livre ISBN 978 2 507 00390 6 pp 16 17 Journel 2015 p 37 a b Bony 2012 p 83 Journel 2015 p 116 Architecture View Le Corbusier s Housing Project Flexible Enough to Endure by Ada Louise Huxtable The New York Times 15 March 1981 Bony 2012 pp 84 85 Journel 2015 p 128 Journel 2015 p 210 Journel 2015 p 98 Journel 2015 p 100 Time Magazine article on Man of the Year 5 May 1961 Journel 2015 p 218 Fish man 1982 pp 244 246 sfn error no target CITEREFFish man1982 help Le Corbusier plus facto que fada Liberation 18 March 2015 Retrieved 23 March 2015 Journel 2015 p 215 Bony 2012 p 143 Journel 2015 p 139 Journel 2015 pp 152 158 Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge pp 426 ISBN 978 0 415 25225 6 Oscar Niemeyer and the United Nations Headquarters 1947 1949 United Nations December 2014 Retrieved 27 August 2019 Le Corbusier Ronchamp Hatje Stuttgart 1925 p 25 Journel 2015 pp 154 55 Letter to Albert Camus 13 February 1957 FLC Fondation Le Corbusier E1 12 154 Journel 2015 pp 184 185 Journel 2015 p 165 Letter to his wife Yvonne 27 February 1951 FLC R1 12 87 Cited by Journal p 182 a b c d e Journel 2015 p 182 letter to his mother 19 November 1954 FLC R2 103 Cited by Journlet p 184 Letter to his brother Albert 26 March 1961 FLC R1 10 586 cited by Journal p 185 a b Journel 2015 p 216 DUYAN EFE 2021 Le Corbusier s Museum as a Critical Attitude Tasarim Kuram 15 28 122 137 via Academia edu Steph Harmon 29 March 2016 When Utzon met Le Corbusier Sydney Opera House unveils eye catching tapestry The Guardian Retrieved 16 January 2022 Choay Francois Le Corbusier Britannica Retrieved 9 June 2020 DUYAN EFE 2017 Le Corbusier s Exhibition Pavilion The Heterogeneous Character of his Modernism Between Representation and Functionalism A Z ITU Journal of Faculty of Architecture 14 3 181 194 doi 10 5505 itujfa 2017 83702 via Academia edu Journel 2015 p 212 a b Foundation History Fondation Le Corbusier Retrieved 18 March 2014 Our Most Frequently Requested Prominent Artists Artists Rights Society 2003 Archived from the original on 31 January 2009 Retrieved 18 March 2014 https www elidealgallego com texto diario mostrar 2308912 reportaje cuatro generaciones viviendo entre petalos arquitecturas racionales Le Corbusier Une maison un palais G Cres amp Cie 1928 pp 70 78 Fishman 1982 p 231 Dalrymple Theodore Autumn 2009 The Architect as Totalitarian Le Corbusier s baleful influence City Journal 19 4 Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 18 March 2014 Evenson Norma 1969 Le Corbusier The Machine and the Grand Design New York George Braziller p 7 Munro Cait 17 April 2005 New Books Claim Le Corbusier Was a Fascist Artnet news Fishman 1982 p 228 Serenyi Peter December 1967 Le Corbusier Fourier and the Monastery of Ema The Art Bulletin 49 4 282 doi 10 2307 3048487 JSTOR 3048487 Donadio Rachel 12 July 2015 New York Times The New York Times Padovan Richard 2 November 1999 Proportion Science Philosophy Architecture Taylor amp Francis p 320 ISBN 978 0 419 22780 9 from Le Corbusier The Modulor p 35 Both the paintings and the architectural designs make use of the golden section Padovan 1999 p 316 Riley 2004 p 382 Riley 2004 p 383 a b c d Brott Simone 8 December 2017 The Le Corbusier Scandal or was Le Corbusier a Fascist Fascism 6 2 196 227 doi 10 1163 22116257 00602003 ISSN 2211 6249 Brott Simone 2013 In the Shadow of the Enlightenment Le Corbusier Le Faisceau and Georges Valois Proceedings of the Society of Architectural Historians Australia and New Zealand 2 30 777 789 his contribution to three fascist revues Plans Prelude and L Homme Reel Samuel Henry 16 April 2015 Le Corbusier was militant fascist two new books on French architect claim Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Mr Jarcy said that in Plans Le Corbusier wrote in support of Nazi anti Semitism and in Prelude co wrote hateful editorials After becoming a wartime resistance fighter Georges Valois was arrested and died in a Nazi concentration camp Celik Zeynep 28 July 1997 Urban Forms and Colonial Confrontations Algiers Under French Rule University of California Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 520 20457 7 Antliff Mark 2007 Avant Garde Fascism The Mobilization of Myth Art and Culture in France 1909 1939 Duke University Press ISBN 978 0 8223 9047 3 Andre Malraux funeral oration for Le Corbusier 1 September 1965 cited in Journal 2015 p 3 1 Rybcznski Witold Time magazine 8 June 1998 Antliff Mark 1997 La Cite francaise George Valois Le Corbusier and Fascist Theories of Urbanism In Antliff Mark Affron Matthew eds Fascist Visions Art and Ideology in France and Italy Princeton University Press pp 134 170 ISBN 978 0 691 02738 8 Le Corbusier Urbanism 1 p 39 Archived copy Archived from the original on 28 June 2021 Retrieved 28 May 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link FITTING PETER 2002 Urban Planning Utopian Dreaming Le Corbusier s Chandigarh Today Utopian Studies 13 1 69 93 ISSN 1045 991X JSTOR 20718410 Tate Le Corbusier Charles Edouard Jeanneret 1887 1965 Tate Retrieved 19 March 2019 Le Corbusier enfant terrible of Modernist Architecture Pash Living Blog pash living co uk 10 October 2014 The Most Important People of the 20th Century Part II Artists amp Entertainers p 144 ISBN missing Musee Fondation Le Corbusier Maison La Roche Paris Convention and Visitors Bureau Retrieved 18 March 2014 About the Faculty University of Cambridge Archived from the original on 2 March 2014 Retrieved 18 March 2014 The Architectural Work of Le Corbusier an Outstanding Contribution to the Modern Movement UNESCO World Heritage Centre United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Retrieved 18 July 2016 Sources Edit Arwas Victor 1992 Art Deco Harry N Abrams Inc ISBN 978 0 8109 1926 6 Sarbjit Bahga Surinder Bahga 2014 Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret The Indian Architecture CreateSpace ISBN 978 1 4959 0625 1 Bony Anne 2012 L Architecture moderne Larousse ISBN 978 2 03 587641 6 Behrens Roy R 2005 Cook Book Gertrude Stein William Cook and Le Corbusier Dysart Iowa Bobolink Books ISBN 0 9713244 1 7 Brooks H Allen 1999 Le Corbusier s Formative Years Charles Edouard Jeanneret at La Chaux de Fonds Paperback Edition University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 07582 6 Eliel Carol S 2002 L Esprit Nouveau Purism in Paris 1918 1925 New York Harry N Abrams Inc ISBN 0 8109 6727 8 Curtis William J R 1994 Le Corbusier Ideas and Forms Phaidon ISBN 978 0 7148 2790 2 Fishman Robert 1982 Urban Utopias in the Twentieth Century Ebenezer Howard Frank Lloyd Wright and Le Corbusier Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press ISBN 978 0 262 56023 8 Frampton Kenneth 2001 Le Corbusier London Thames and Hudson Jencks Charles 2000 Le Corbusier and the Continual Revolution in Architecture The Monacelli Press ISBN 978 1 58093 077 2 Jornod Naima and Jornod Jean Pierre 2005 Le Corbusier Charles Edouard Jeanneret catalogue raisonne de l oeuvre peint Skira ISBN 88 7624 203 1 Journel Guillemette Morel 2015 Le Corbusier Construire la Vie Moderne in French Editions du Patrimoine Centre des Monument Nationaux ISBN 978 2 7577 0419 6 Korolija Fontana Giusti Gordana 2015 Transgression and Ekphrasis in Le Corbusier s Journey to the East in Transgression Towards the Expanded Field in Architecture edited by Louis Rice and David Littlefield London Routledge 57 75 ISBN 978 1 13 881892 7 Le Corbusier 1925 L Art decoratif d aujourdhui in French G Cres et Cie Le Corbusier 1923 Vers une architecture in French Flammarion 1995 ISBN 978 2 0812 1744 7 Dumont Marie Jeanne ed 2002 Le Corbusier Lettres a ses maitres in French Editions du Linteau Solitaire Marc 2016 Au retour de La Chaux de Fonds Le Corbusier amp Froebel editions Wiking ISBN 978 2 9545239 1 0 Riley Noel 2004 Grammaire des Arts Decoratifs in French Flammarion Von Moos Stanislaus 2009 Le Corbusier Elements of A Synthesis Rotterdam 010 Publishers Weber Nicholas Fox 2008 Le Corbusier A Life Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 375 41043 0 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Le Corbusier Wikimedia Commons has media related to Le Corbusier Le Corbusier architectural drawings 1935 1961 Held by the Department of Drawings amp Archives Avery Architectural amp Fine Arts Library Columbia University Fondation Le Corbusier Official site Projects by Le Corbusier ArchDaily Le Corbusier s Working Lifestyle Working with Le Corbusier Plummer Henry Cosmos of Light The Sacred Architecture of Le Corbusier Bloomington Indiana University Press 2013 Le Corbusier and the Sun solarhousehistory com 28 October 2013 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Le Corbusier amp oldid 1169650931, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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