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Le Corbusier
Swiss born architect, theorist and designer Le Corbusier
(1887-1965) worked and wrote with a unique vision, energy
and clarity that made him one of the most influential
figures shaping the international style during the early
1900s. Born Charles Edouard Jeanneret, he rechristened
himself Le Corbusier in Paris in 1920, around the time
he started his journal L'Esprit Nouveau. An active member
of the Parisian art scene and co-founder of the Congrès
Internationaux d'Architecture Moderne (CIAM), he championed
a minimalist modernism built around the idea of the home
as a "machine for living."
Le Corbusier originally trained as a watch engraver in
his hometown of La Chaux de Fonds at the vocational arts
college. He began a successful career as an engraver,
in 1902 he was awarded a prize at the Turin Exhibition
for a watch engraving, but he soon turned his attention
to architecture. In 1905 he worked on his first project,
the Villa Fallet, and in 1907 he left for Italy and Paris
to study different architectural styles. He worked at
the architectural offices of Auguste Perret in Paris and
apprenticed himself to Peter Behrens in Berlin for a year
in 1910. In 1912 he returned to close the circle of his
training years by working as an architecture teacher in
La Chaux de Fonds until 1914.
The Domino House of 1914 represented an emergence of the
free-flowing interior plan that would dominate his architectural
style. The structural frame of this building was made
of reinforced concrete supported by steel pillars. The
lack of supporting walls turned the domestic space into
an open, industrially elegant environment. In 1917 he
moved to Paris where the contagious immediacy of the art
scene inspired him to produce a number of paintings. Along
with painter Amédée Ozenfant he wrote the
manifesto, "Après le Cubisme" championing
a new post-cubist purism. Le Corbusier designed Ozenfant's
home in 1922.
Throughout the 1920s Le Corbusier solidified his philosophies
about design and began publishing books and journals.
In 1923 he came out with his book, Towards a New Architecture
which was followed, in 1926, by Five Points of a New Architecture
wherein he outlined architectural guidelines such as the
necessity of a roof terrace, an unrestricted interior
space, expansive windows, a plain exterior and columns
for structural support. In 1928 he began creating furnishings
for his buildings as part of a collaboration with Pierre
Jeanneret and Charlotte Perriand. The three created a
series of tubular steel furniture that they exhibited
at the 1929 Salon d'Automne in Paris and from which emerged
some of the most lasting icons of the international style.
The furniture, entitled as a group, "Equipment for
Living," was designed in rich leather or cowhide
upholstery and featured the "B 302" swivel chair,
the "B301" armchair and the "B 306"
chaise longue, which Le Corbusier referred to as the "relaxing
machine." Thonet originally manufactured these pieces
and many have been reissued in recent years by Cassina
as part of their line of classics. Le Corbusier, Jeanneret
and Perriand also designed the "Grand Confort"
furniture, which was a plump, upholstered answer to the
lean art deco shapes of the other series. |
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