Le Corbusier
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Charles-Edouard Jeanneret | |
| Image:10 und 20 CHF.jpg Swiss ten francs banknote with Le Corbusier's portrait (left) | |
| Personal Information | |
|---|---|
| Name | Charles-Edouard Jeanneret |
| Nationality | Swiss, French |
| Birth date | October 6, 1887 |
| Birth place | La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland |
| Date of death | August 27, 1965 |
| Place of death | Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France |
| Working Life | |
| Significant Buildings | Villa Savoye Unité d'Habitation |
| Significant Projects | Ville Radieuse |
Charles-Edouard Jeanneret, widely known as Le Corbusier (October 6, 1887– August 27, 1965), was a French Swiss born architect, famous for his contributions to what is now called modernism, or the International Style. He was a pioneer in theoretical studies of modern design and was dedicated to providing better living conditions for the residents of crowded cities. His career spanned five decades, with iconic buildings constructed across central Europe, India, Russia, and one structure each in North and South America. He was also an urban planner, painter, sculptor, writer and modern furniture designer.
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[edit] Early life and education, 1887-1913
He was born as Charles-Edouard Jeanneret in La Chaux-de-Fonds, a small town of Neuchâtel canton in north-western Switzerland, in the Jura mountains, just four kilometers across the border from France.
Le Corbusier was attracted to the visual arts and studied under Charles L'Éplattenier at the La-Chaux-de-Fonds Art School, who had himself studied in Budapest and Paris. He designed his earliest houses, like the Villa Fallet, the Villa Schwob, and the Villa Jeanneret (the latter of which was for his parents) in La Chaux-de-Fonds. These houses recall the indigenous mountainous vernacular architectural styles popular in the Alps.
In his early years he frequently would escape the somewhat provincial atmosphere of his hometown by traveling around Europe. In about 1907 he travelled to Paris, where he found work in the office of Auguste Perret, the French pioneer in reinforced concrete. Between October 1910 and March 1911 he worked for the renowned architect Peter Behrens near Berlin, where he met Ludwig Mies van der Rohe and became fluent in German. Both of these experiences proved influential in his later career. Later in 1911 he would journey to the Balkans and visit Greece and Turkey, filling sketchbooks with renderings of what he saw, including many famous sketches of the Parthenon, whose forms he would later praise in his work Vers une architecture (1923).
[edit] Early career: the villas, 1914-1930
Le Corbusier taught at his old school in La-Chaux-de-Fonds during World War I, not returning to Paris until the war was over. During these four years in Switzerland, he worked on theoretical architectural studies using modern techniques.<ref name="Choay">Choay, Françoise, le corbusier (1960), pp. 10-11. George Braziller, Inc. ISBN 0-8076-0104-7.</ref> Among these was his project for the "Dom-ino" House (1914-1915). This model proposed an open floor plan consisting of concrete slabs supported by a minimal number of thin reinforced concrete piers around the edges, with a stairway providing access to each level on one side of the floor plan. The design soon became the foundation for most of his architecture for the next ten years. Soon he would begin his own architectural practice with his cousin, Pierre Jeanneret (1896-1967), a partnership that would last until 1940.
In 1918 Le Corbusier met the disillusioned Cubist painter Amédée Ozenfant, in whom he recognized 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 Jeanneret established the Purist journal L'Esprit Nouveau. In 1920, in the first issue, Charles-Edouard Jeanneret adopted the moniker "Le Corbusier" (an altered form of his maternal grandfather's name, "Lecorbésier") as a pseudonym, reflecting his belief that anyone could reinvent himself. Some architectural historians claim that this pseudonym translates as "the crow-like one." [citation needed] Between 1918 and 1922 Le Corbusier built nothing, concentrating his efforts on Purist theory and painting. In 1922 Le Corbusier and Jeanneret opened a studio in Paris at at 35 rue de Sèvres.<ref name="Choay" />
His theoretical studies soon advanced into several different single-family house models. Among these was the Maison "Citrohan," a pun on the name of the French Citroën automaker, for the modern industrial methods and materials Le Corbusier advocated using for the house. Here, 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 ground level. Here, as in other projects from this period, he also designed the façades to include large expanses of uninterrupted window space. The house used a rectangular plan, with exterior walls not filled by windows left as white, stuccoed spaces. Le Corbusier and Jeanneret left the interior aesthetic spare, with any movable furniture made of tubular metal frames. Light fixtures usually comprised single, bare bulbs. Interior walls were also left white. Between 1922 and 1927 Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret designed many of these private houses for clients around Paris. In Boulogne-sur-Seine and the 16th arrondissement of Paris, Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret designed and built the Villa Lipschitz, Maison Cook (see William Edwards Cook), Maison Planeix, and the Maison LaRoche/Albert Jeanneret (which now houses the Fondation Le Corbusier).
Le Corbusier took French citizenship in 1930.<ref name="Choay"/>
[edit] Five points of architecture
Image:Villa savoye avant.jpg It was Le Corbusier's Villa Savoye (1929-1931) that most succinctly summed up his five points of architecture that he had elucidated in the journal L'Esprit Nouveau and his book Vers une architecture, and 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 yard, and which constitute the fourth point of his system. A ramp rising from the ground level to the third floor roof terrace (the fifth point) allows for an architectural promenade through the structure. The white tubular railing recalls the industrial "ocean-liner" aesthetic that Le Corbusier much admired. As if to put an exclamation point on Le Corbusier's homage to modern industry, the driveway around the ground floor, with its semicircular path, measures the exact turning radius of a 1929 Voisin automobile.
[edit] Forays into urbanism, 1922-1929
For a number of years French officials had been unsuccessful in dealing with the squalor of the growing Parisian slums, and Le Corbusier sought efficient ways to house large numbers of people in response to the urban housing crisis. He believed that his new, modern architectural forms would provide a new organizational solution that would raise the quality of life of the lower classes who lived in such dirty quarters. His Immeubles Villas (1922) was such a project that called for large blocks of cell-like individual apartments stacked one on top of the other, with plans that included a living room, bedrooms, and kitchen, as well as a garden terrace.
Not merely content with designs for a few housing blocks, soon Le Corbusier moved into studies for entire cities. In 1922, he also presented his scheme for a Contemporary City for Three Million Inhabitants (Ville Contemporaine). The centerpiece of this plan was the group of sixty-story cruciform skyscrapers built on steel frames and encased in huge curtain walls of glass. They housed both offices and the apartments of the most wealthy inhabitants. These skyscrapers were set within large, rectangular park-like green spaces. At the very center was a huge transportation center, that on different levels included depots for buses and trains, as well as highway intersections and at the top, an airport. (He had the fanciful notion that commercial airliners would land between the huge skyscrapers). Le Corbusier segregated the pedestrian circulation paths from the roadways, and glorified the use of the automobile as a means of transportation. As one moved out from the central skyscrapers, smaller multistory zigzag blocks set in green space and set far back from the street housed the proletarian workers. Le Corbusier hoped that politically-minded industrialists in France would lead the way with their efficient Taylorist and Fordist strategies adopted from American models to reorganize society.
In this new industrialist spirit, Le Corbusier began a new journal called L'Esprit Nouveau that advocated the use of modern, industrial techniques and strategies to transform society into a more efficient environment with a higher standard of living on all socioeconomic levels. He forcefully argued that this transformation was necessary to avoid the specter of revolution that would otherwise shake society. His dictum "Architecture or Revolution," developed in his articles in this journal, became his rallying cry for the book Vers une architecture ("Towards an Architecture," mistranslated into English as Towards a New Architecture), which was comprised of selected articles from L'Esprit Nouveau between 1920 and 1923.
The theoretical urban schemes continued to occupy Le Corbusier. He exhibited his Plan Voisin (sponsored by another famous automobile manufacturer) in 1925. In it, he proposed to bulldoze huge sections of Paris north of the Seine and replace it with his sixty-story cruciform towers from the Contemporary City, placed in an orthogonal street grid and park-like green space. His scheme was met with only criticism and scorn from French politicians and industrialists, although they were favorable to the ideas of Taylorism and Fordism underlying Le Corbusier designs. Nonetheless, it did provoke discussion concerning how to deal with the cramped, dirty conditions that enveloped much of the city.
[edit] The Modulor
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. 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.<ref>Le Corbusier, The Modulor, p. 35, as cited in Padovan, Richard, Proportion: Science, Philosophy, Architecture (1999), p. 320. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-419-22780-6: "Both the paintings and the architectural designs make use of the golden section".</ref> 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 golden section and Fibonacci the 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."<ref> Ibid. The Modulor pp.25, as cited in Padovan's Proportion: Science, Philosophy, Architecture pp.316</ref>
[edit] Furniture
Le Corbusier began experimenting with furniture design in 1928 after inviting the architect Charlotte Perriand to join his studio. His cousin Pierre Jeanneret also collaborated on many of the designs. Before the arrival of Perriand, Le Corbusier relied on ready-made furniture to furnish his projects, such as the simple pieces manufactured by Thonet.
In 1928 Le Corbusier and Perriand began to put the expectations for furniture Le Corbusier outlined in his 1925 book L'Art Décoratif d'aujourd'hui into practice. In the book he defined 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, type-functions, therefore type-objects and type-furniture. The human-limb object is a docile servant. A good servant is discreet and self-effacing in order 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".
The first results of the collaboration were three chrome-plated tubular steel chairs designed for two of his projects, The Maison La Roche house in Paris and a pavilion for Henry and Barbara Church. The line of furniture was expanded for Le Corbusier's 1929 Salon d'Automne installation Equipment for the Home. In the year 1964, while Le Corbusier was still alive, Cassina S.p.A. of Milan acquired the exclusive worldwide rights to manufacture his furniture designs. Today many copies exist but Cassina is still the only manufacturer authorized by the Fondation Le Corbusier.
[edit] Death
On August 27, 1965, against his doctor's orders, Le Corbusier went for a swim in the Mediterranean Sea at Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, France. His body was found by bathers and he was pronounced dead at 11 am. It was assumed that he suffered a heart attack, at the age of 78. His death rites took place at the courtyard of the Louvre Palace on September 1, 1965 under the direction of writer and thinker André Malraux, who was at the time France's Minister of Culture.
Le Corbusier's death had a strong impact on the cultural and political world. Homages were paid world wide and even some of Le Corbusier's worst artistic enemies, like painter Salvador Dalí, recognized his importance and sent a floral tribute. In the Cold War era, the President of the United States said: "His influence was universal and his works are invested with a permanent quality possessed by those of very few artists in our history". The Soviets replied: "Modern architecture has lost its greatest master". Japanese TV channels decided to broadcast simultaneously his Museum in Tokyo, in what was at the time a unique media homage.
[edit] Influence
Le Corbusier was at his most influential in the sphere of urban planning, and was a founding member of the Congrès International d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM). One of the first to realize how the automobile would change human agglomerations, Le Corbusier described the city of the future as consisting of large apartment buildings isolated in a park-like setting on pilotis. Le Corbusier's theories were adopted by the builders of public housing in the United States. For the design of the buildings themselves, Le Corbusier said "by law, all buildings should be white"[citation needed] and criticized any effort at ornamentation. The large spartan structures, in cities, but not of cities, have been widely criticized for being boring and unfriendly to pedestrians. The city plan of Brasília was based on his ideas, as was Chandigarh in India and the industrial city of Zlín in the Czech Republic. Le Corbusier's thinking also had profound effects on the philosophy of city planning and architecture in the Soviet Union.
Le Corbusier was heavily influenced by the problems he saw in the industrial city of the turn of the 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 concepts. Ebenezer Howard's Garden Cities of To-Morrow heavily influenced Le Corbusier and his contemporaries.
[edit] Major buildings and projects
- 1905 - Villa Fallet, La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland
- 1912 - Villa Jeanneret, Paris
- 1916 - Villa Schwob, Paris
- 1923 - Villa LaRoche/Villa Jeanneret, Paris
- 1924 - Pavillon de L'Esprit Nouveau, Paris (destroyed)
- 1924 - Quartiers Modernes Frugès, Pessac, France
- 1926 - Villa Cook, Boulogne-sur-Seine, France
- 1927 - Villas at Weissenhof Estate, Stuttgart, Germany
- 1928 - Villa Savoye, Poissy-sur-Seine, France
- 1929 - Armée du Salut, Cité de Refuge, Paris
- 1930 - Pavillon Suisse, Cité Universitaire, Paris
- 1931 - Palace of the Soviets , Moscow, USSR (project)
- 1933 - Tsentrosoyuz, Moscow, USSR
- 1936 - Palace of Ministry of National Education and Public Health, Rio de Janeiro
- 1938 - The "Cartesian" sky-scraper (project)
- 1946 - Duval factory in Saint-Dié, France
- 1947-1952 - Unité d'Habitation, Marseille, France
- 1948 - Curutchet House, La Plata, Argentina
- 1949 - Usine Claude et Duval, Saint-Dié-des-Vosges, France
- 1949-1952 - United Nations headquarters, New York City (project)
- 1950-1954 - Chapelle Notre Dame du Haut, Ronchamp, France
- 1951 - Cabanon Le Corbusier, Roquebrune-Cap-Martin
- 1951 - Maisons Jaoul, Neuilly-sur-Seine, France
- 1952 - Unité d'Habitation of Nantes-Rezé, Nantes, France
- 1952-1959 - Buildings in Chandigarh, India (with Iannis Xenakis)
- 1956 - Museum at Ahmedabad, Ahmedabad, India
- 1957 - Unité d'Habitation of Briey en Forêt, France
- 1957 - National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
- 1957 - Maison du Brésil, Cité Universitaire, Paris
- 1957-1960 - Sainte Marie de La Tourette, near Lyon, France (with Iannis Xenakis)
- 1957 - Unité d'Habitation of Berlin-Charlottenburg, Flatowallee 16, Berlin
- 1957 - Unité d'Habitation of Meaux, France
- 1958 - Pavillon Philips, Brussels, Belgium (with Iannis Xenakis) (destroyed)
- 1960 - Unité d'Habitation of Firminy, France
- 1960 - Maison des Jeunes dt de la Culture, Firminy, France
- 1961 - Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States
- 1971 - Church of Saint-Pierre, Firminy, France, constructed posthumously and completed in 2006
[edit] Major written works
- 1918 - Après le cubisme (After Cubism), with Amédée Ozenfant
- 1923 - Vers une architecture (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)
- 1931 - Premier clavier de couleurs (First Color Keyboard)
- 1935 - Aircraft
- 1935 - La Ville radieuse (The Radiant City)
- 1942 - Chartre d'Athenes (Athens Charter)
- 1943 - Entretien avec les étudiants des écoles d'architecture (A Conversation with Architecture Students)
- 1948 - Le Modulor (The Modulor)
- 1955 - Le Modulor 2 (The Modulor 2)
- 1959 - Deuxième clavier de couleurs (Second Color Keyboard)
[edit] Quotations
- "You employ stone, wood and concrete, and with these materials you build houses and palaces: that is construction. Ingenuity is at work. But suddenly you touch my heart, you do me good. I am happy and I say: "This is beautiful. That is Architecture. Art enters in..." (Vers une architecture, 1923)
- "Architecture is the masterly, correct and magnificent play of masses brought together in light."
- "Space and light and order. Those are the things that men need just as much as they need bread or a place to sleep."
- "The house is a machine for living in." (Vers une architecture, 1923)
- "It is a question of building which is at the root of the social unrest of today: architecture or revolution." (Vers une architecture, 1923)
- "Modern life demands, and is waiting for, a new kind of plan, both for the house and the city." (Vers une architecture, 1923)
- "The 'Styles' are a lie." (Vers une architecture, 1923)
[edit] Trivia
- Le Corbusier's portrait was featured on the Swiss ten francs banknote, pictured with his distinctive eyeglasses.
- There is a Le Corbusier Boulevard in Laval, Quebec, Canada
[edit] See also
- Category:Le Corbusier buildings – thumbnail images of buildings and articles
- Modernism
[edit] References
<references />
[edit] Further reading
- Marco Venturi, Le Corbusier Algiers Plans, research available on planum.net
- Behrens, Roy R. (2005). COOK BOOK: Gertrude Stein, William Cook and Le Corbusier. Dysart, Iowa: Bobolink Books. ISBN 0-9713244-1-7.
- Eliel, Carol S. (2002). L'Esprit Nouveau: Purism in Paris, 1918 - 1925. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc. ISBN 0-8109-6727-8.
[edit] External links
- Fondation Le Corbusier - official website
- Swiss ten franc bill featuring Le Corbusier (in circulation since 1995)
- Le Corbusier quotations
- Chandigarh
- Le Corbusier - Design Dictionary Architect and designer Le Corbusier.
- The Maison Blanche in La Chaux de fondar:لو كوربوزييه
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