An Atlas of Modern Landscapes. The exhibition features room-sized interiors, major paintings, and original architectural models of buildings designed by the architect. Bringing together around 320 objects, the show focuses on four types of landscapes, observed or conceived at different scales, and documented in all the genres Le Corbusier pursued during six decades.
curators: Jean-Louis Cohen and Barry Bergdoll
Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes, the largest
exhibition ever produced in New York of the protean and influential oeuvre of Le Corbusier
(Charles-Édouard Jeanneret, French, b. Switzerland, 1887–1965), encompasses his work as an
architect, interior designer, artist, city planner, writer, and photographer, and is on view from
June 15 through September 23, 2013. This major exhibition draws on MoMA’s own collection, and
extensively on exclusive loans from the Paris-based Le Corbusier Foundation. Following a path
from his youth in the Swiss Jura mountains to his death on the shores of the French Riviera, the
exhibition focuses on four types of landscapes, observed or conceived at different scales, and
documented in all the genres Le Corbusier pursued during six decades: the landscape of found
objects; the domestic landscape; the architectural landscape of the modern city; and the vast
territories he planned. MoMA is the only U.S. venue for the exhibition, which will travel to
Fundació "la Caixa" in Barcelona (February 6–May 11, 2014), and to Fundació "la Caixa" in Madrid
(June 11–October 19, 2014). It is organized by guest curator Jean-Louis Cohen, Sheldon H. Solow
Professor in the History of Architecture, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University, with Barry
Bergdoll, The Philip Johnson Chief Curator of Architecture and Design at MoMA.
Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes reveals the ways in which Le Corbusier
observed and imagined landscapes throughout his career, using all the artistic mediums and
techniques at his disposal, from early watercolors of Italy, Greece, and Turkey, to sketches of
India, and from photographs of his formative journeys to architectural models of his large-scale
projects. Bringing together around 320 objects, all of these dimensions of Le Corbusier’s artistic
process, including major paintings and four reconstructed interiors, are presented in MoMA’s first
comprehensive exhibition of his work.
Le Corbusier: An Atlas of Modern Landscapes is divided into five sections, and begins with
one of four room-sized interiors built especially for the exhibition. Featuring original furniture, the
interiors vividly present Le Corbusier’s concepts for domestic landscapes, and the notion of houses
operating as machines to view landscapes. The first interior on view is the Cabanon of Le
Corbusier from Roquebrune-Cap-Martin (1951–52), installed in the area outside the Tisch
galleries. A cabin built on the coast of the gulf of Monte Carlo as a summer haven for Le Corbusier
himself, the Cabanon’s interior dimensions are based on those of the Modulor, a system of
harmonic proportions Le Corbusier had created in the 1940s. The Cabanaon features rustic
elements—bark-covered exterior planks and furniture—crafted by the carpenter Charles Barberis.
From the Jura Mountains to the Wide World
The first section within the galleries is devoted to Le Corbusier’s early life, in his hometown of La
Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland. Under the direction of his teacher, Charles L’Eplattenier, Le
Corbusier learned to draw, exploring the landscape of the Jura mountains, before focusing on
architecture and completing his first house at the age of 20. Over the next five years Le Corbusier
discovered the horizons of Europe. In 1907 he made an initial study trip to Italy, followed by a
visit to Vienna. In 1908–09 he worked in the Paris studio of the Perret brothers, pioneers in the
use of reinforced concrete. He then travelled to Germany in order to study urbanism, working in
Berlin in the studio of Peter Behrens, and in 1911 journeyed to Greece and Istanbul via the
Balkans. These travels around Europe are represented in the exhibition with an extraordinary
selection of watercolors and pencil drawings. Sketchbooks, both large and small, reveal through
hundreds of drawings the time spent observing landscapes of cities and the countryside.
Upon returning to La Chaux-de-Fonds in 1912, Le Corbusier began teaching architecture
and interior design. He also built several houses in which he drew upon the experiences of his
travels, such as the Villa Jeanneret-Perret, also known as the Maison Blanche, which he designed
for his parents. Blueprints from his time in La Chaux-de-Fonds and a room-sized interior of the
Maison Blanche (1912) with the original furniture are both on view. Based on a collection of
shapes observed during his journeys, the house was a break from the regional style of the area
and Le Corbusier’s first work as an independent architect.
The Conquest of Paris
The second section focuses on Le Corbusier’s time in Paris, whose sites and monuments he drew
tirelessly. In addition to his prolific writing at this time, Le Corbusier painted assiduously,
arranging on the canvas objects of daily life as if they were forming landscapes. Among these are
La Cheminée (1918), his first painting, Still Life (1920), Guitare verticale – premiere version
(1920), and Nature morte du Pavillon de l’Esprit nouveau (1924).
In 1922 he opened an architecture studio with his cousin Pierre Jeanneret (1896–1967).
They would work together until 1940, as he conducted two sets of projects in parallel. On the one
hand, he developed theoretical schemes, such as the “Citrohan” house (1920), the “immeuble-
villas” (villa apartments), the “Ville contemporaine” (Contemporary City) (1922), and the “Plan
Voisin” for Paris (1925), each of which is represented in the exhibition through drawings. On the
other, Le Corbusier built villas for the elite of the French capital, in which he experimented with
his provocative ideas for a new architecture made possible by reinforced concrete. These are
represented in the exhibition through models and drawings. The third room-sized interior on view
is from one such villa, the Pavilion for the Villa Church in Ville d’Avray (1927–29), a project for an
American couple, Henry and Barbara Church. Working with a pre-existing neoclassical structure,
Le Corbusier transformed it into a music pavilion with a library in which a rectangular window
delimited the view of the surrounding garden as if it were a painting. Surrounded by a large
frame, the window provided the backdrop for an interior landscape where furniture designed in
1928 by Charlotte Perriand, Le Corbusier, and Pierre Jeanneret was used in a domestic setting for
the first time.
Responding to Landscape from Africa to the Americas
The third section focuses on the late 1920s, when Le Corbusier abandoned the prismatic forms he
used in his houses of that decade and developed an architecture that was more attentive to
landscape, echoing transformations in his painting style, which is represented here by a number of
canvases. He greatly expanded the geographic range of his endeavors while continuing to work on
his projects for Paris.
His first European success came in 1928 during a triumphant visit to Moscow, where he
received the commission for a ministry building, the Centrosoyuz, completed in 1936 (though he
was defeated in the competition for the Palace of the Soviets in 1932, the original model of
which—from MoMA’s own collection—is on view). Le Corbusier’s accomplishments reverberated
around the globe due to the success of his books, which in turn increased the impact of his
buildings. His encounters with new landscapes transformed his way of thinking. In 1929 his
successful lecture tour of South America led him to develop plans for Rio de Janeiro, Montevideo,
and São Paulo. However, the enthusiastic welcome of local elites did not guarantee the success of
his projects. Le Corbusier sought in vain for 12 years to carry out his provocative plan for Algiers,
shown in the exhibition through numerous drawings, sketches, and an original 1945 model of the
skyscraper he designed for Algiers. Among the diverse techniques used by Le Corbusier to
persuade the public of the truth of his analyses and projects, lectures played a prominent role. It
was in front of the audience that he developed directly, drawing on long sheets of paper, his main
ideas and proposals; some of these monumental drawings are on view in the section.
Chandigarh: A New Urban Landscape for India
After 1945 Le Corbusier would face new frustrations when the headquarters of the United Nations
in New York were built by Wallace K. Harrison, based on sketches by Le Corbusier and Oscar
Niemeyer. But he finally managed to design an entire city, the only one in his career, as the result
of a commission from the Indian government. Le Corbusier developed the plan for Chandigarh,
the new capital of the Indian state of Punjab, a project that enabled him to implement, over a vast
territory, ideas developed 30 years earlier in relation to ancient Rome. Numerous drawings,
sketches, and models of Chandigarh are on view. The flights he took twice a year between Europe
and India provided the opportunity for him to practice “the view of the airplane,” as he termed it.
The sketches on view retain the countless traces of his observations of continents, islands, and
mountains. If the architecture of the 1920s was strongly related to his paintings, that of the 1950s
echoed his sculptures, from works in wood produced by the Breton cabinet-maker Joseph Savina
to sand-casts he developed in Long Island with Costantino Nivola. Le Corbusier also continued his
work as an author, publishing numerous books. With the Modulor, a system of harmonic
proportions unveiled in New York in 1947, and on behalf of the "Synthesis of the Arts," he aimed
to become the central figure of a modern architecture that was almost universally accepted by
that time.
Toward the Mediterranean, or the Eternal Return
During the last 15 years of his life, Le Corbusier appeared to achieve many of the objectives he
had been pursuing for decades. He finally realized a building in the United States, the Carpenter
Center at Harvard University, as well as five large residential units, including his building in
Marseille. This project for a “unité d'habitation” (“housing unit”), or a “vertical garden city,” was
developed in 1945 and commissioned for the rehousing of people left homeless by the war. In
Marseille, for the 337 double-height apartments assembled on a reinforced concrete frame, Le
Corbusier used the proportions of the Modulor to design the elements of the building. The
roughness of the surfaces and the traces of wooden formwork that resulted from the lack of
sufficient skilled labor led him to assert the beauty of “rough” concrete. The interiors resulted from
a collective effort. The built-in kitchen cupboards, designed by Charlotte Perriand, and the steel
stairways, designed by Jean Prouvé, are complemented by elegant shelves. The loggias became
an intermediary space between the interiors and the Provencal landscape. The building is
represented in the exhibition through models, photos, drawings, and the final room-sized interior.
Toward the end of his career the question of landscape remained central to Le Corbusier's work,
and he strove to respond to geography whether in the east of France, at Ronchamp, or in the
region of Lyon at La Tourette. The hospital that he designed in Venice beginning in 1962
transposed the reflections he had made during the 1930s, and is represented through drawings,
models, and plans.
SPONSORSHIP:
The exhibition is made possible by Hyundai Card.
Major support is provided by Cetie Nippert Ames and Anthony Ames.
Additional generous support is provided by the Lily Auchincloss Foundation, Inc.; Pro Helvetia, the
Swiss Arts Council; Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III; Phyllis Lambert; and an anonymous donor.
Funding for the accompanying publication is provided by The International Council of The Museum
of Modern Art.
PUBLICATION:
An Atlas of Modern Landscapes examines Le Corbusier’s relationship with the topographies of five
continents, in essays by 30 of the foremost scholars of his work. The Swiss-born, Paris-based
architect is often remembered as having been aggressively indifferent to the sites of his buildings
and plans, but this new generation of research, analysis, and interpretation asserts that even the
most generic of his projects responded to specific geographies. His sketchbooks, letters, and
publications confirm that he was deeply involved with both optical and bodily relationships to
landscapes, whether in an intimate suburban plot or against a dramatic horizon. Organized by
geographic regions, as an atlas, and featuring maps, the book spans his career—from his
beginnings in Switzerland, as a disciple of the regional style in his hometown of La Chaux-de-
Fonds, to the creation of the new Indian city of Chandigarh; from touring Europe in his Avions
Voisin automobile to mapping South America from the air; from inserting grand plans into existing
urban layouts to setting a chapel atop an isolated hill in Ronchamp, France—revealing how Le
Corbusier transformed territories into landscapes. 9.5 x 12", 404 pages, 422 ills. $75. Available
exclusively at the MoMA Stores and online at MoMAstore.org through the end of July.
PUBLIC PROGRAM:
The Center for Architecture, in collaboration with MoMA, presents Le Corbusier/New York
symposium on June 8 and 9. Peter Eisenman, FAIA; Yale Professor Stanislaus von Moos;
Columbia Professor Mary McLeod; exhibition organizers Barry Bergdoll and Jean-Louis Cohen; and
others discuss how Le Corbusier’s ideas about New York influenced his work and how, in turn, Le
Corbusier’s legacy impacted the city’s built environment. The second day, June 9, is dedicated to a
tour of the United Nations Headquarters. Led by Assistant Secretary-General Michael Adlerstein,
FAIA, and Public Information Officer Werner Schmidt, the tour will explore the building's
architectural history, including Le Corbusier’s contentious collaboration with the project’s main
architect, Oscar Niemeyer. Registration for the symposium is available at aiany.org/calendar. All
tickets include reserved seats to the symposium, registration for a MoMA exhibition tour and the
United Nations Headquarters tour, and Saturday breakfast, lunch, and reception. The symposium
is organized by Center for Architecture and MoMA. A complete schedule and further information is
available via the MoMA press website.
The symposium is co-sponsored by AIANY Interiors Committee, AIANY Cultural Facilities
Committee, and AIANY Historic.
Image: Le Corbusier (Charles-Édouard Jeanneret) (French, born Switzerland. 1887-1965). Villa Savoye, Poissy. 1928-31. Model, 1932. Wood, aluminum, and plastic. 16 x 34 x 32" (40.6 x 86.4 x 81.3 cm). Model maker: Theodore Conrad. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Purchase. © 2013 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / ADAGP, Paris / FLC
Press contact:
Paul Jackson 212-708-9593 paul_jackson@moma.org
Press Preview: Wednesday, June 5, 10:00 a.m.–12:00 p.m.
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