DOCOMOMO JOURNAL 53
LC 50 YEARS AFTER

30.00

Out of stock

Category:

Description

Docomomo Journal 53
LC 50 Years After (100 pages)

Editorial
LC′s Poetic Endurance Time and Space — Light and Matter By Ana Tostões

Lectures
On Collective Form By Fumihiko Maki

Essays:
The Role of the Fondation Le Corbusier in the Conservation of the Le Corbusier′s Architectural Work By Bénédicte Gandini and Michel Richard

Restoration of the Petite Maison, Corseaux, 1924, Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret. Construction Practice as Research By Franz Graf and Giulia Marino

The villa Le Lac by Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret at Corseaux-sous-Vevey. The Color Rediscovered By Elise Koering

Maison Curutchet, La Plata, Argentina By Jorge Néstor Bozzano and Julio Santana

La Villa Savoye after Le Corbusier, une Longue Histoire By Susanna Caccia Gherardini and Carlo Olmo

The Restoration of the Paintings of Le Corbusier in the Villa E-1027, Roquebrune-Cap-Martin, Alpes Maritimes By Marie-Odile Hubert

Renovation and Restructuring the Cité de Refuge by Le Corbusier and Pierre Jeanneret. Preserving the Dual Functional and Architectural Identity of the Masterpiece By Gilles Ragot

The Couvent de La Tourette from 1960 to the present day. Future Discernibility of Past Interventions By Roberta Grignolo

National Museum of Western Art as Important Cultural Property of Japan: its Evolution and Historical Value By Yoshiyuki Yamana and Kyo Fukuda

Heritage in Danger

News

Book Reviews

Appendix

Editorial
LC′s Poetic Endurance Time and Space — Light and Matter By Ana Tostões

The theme of this 53rd docomomo Journal is LC — 50 Years After. As a tribute to Le Corbusier (LC) on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of his death, this issue of docomomo Journal is focused on rehabilitation and conservation processes undertaken on Le Corbusier buildings and sites worldwide monitored by the Fondation Le Corbusier (FLC).

LC prolific personality as theorist, painter, sculptor, architect, urban planner, researcher, disseminator, thinker, and provocative activist, helped to make him a universal author. His dual and inseparable theoretical and practical activities represented a source for LC’s balanced inspirational and systematic method. Envisaging “la planète comme chantier”1, LC drove his obsessive constructive impulse around the whole world, to nations such as Japan, Russia, Argentina and India. Thinking deeply about the human condition in the contemporary age, he looked for solutions to solve social, technical and spatial problems, believing that architecture could have the power to improve the world. To the question “architecture or revolution?” he answered “revolution can be avoided”2 through modern architecture.

50 years later, Le Corbusier still creates controversy, passion, discussion and intellectual stimulus, confirming the endurance of his long life energy, spirit and legacy. Through time and space, proportion and matter, his architecture is in fact a “wise, correct and magnificent play of volumes gathered under light”3 crystallizing a vision of the world as an “espace indicible”4.

Nowadays, several of LC’s buildings are under threat. This issue of docomomo Journal presents a large variety of interventions and approaches, showing the cross-section of issues that Le Corbusier’s work raises in the restoration of Modern Architecture.

From houses to facilities, from Europe to Asia or America, from public authorities to private owners, these buildings have stood the test of time, proving their resilience and character.

I wish to thank Bénédicte Gandini, Michel Richard, and the FLC, for accepting the challenge to be the guest editors of this issue and to share with us the “transnational” importance of Le Corbusier, through the analyzes conducted by a exceptional range of experts.

docomomo International wishes to stress the importance of the FLC in disseminating LC’s ideas and preserving his work. Besides being responsible for keeping alive LC’s knowledge and spirit, and gathering precious archives consulted on a daily basis by researchers worldwide, the FLC is carrying out a most important task: the proposed inclusion of “The architectural work of Le Corbusier [as] an outstanding contribution to the Modern Movement” in the UNESCO World Heritage List (WHL). Envisaged as cultural property, it is a transnational application that brings together the nations of Argentina, Belgium, France, India, Japan and Switzerland at the World Heritage Convention. The aim is to fight for recognition of the buildings and sites constructed by Le Corbusier worldwide as exceptional and as milestones of the Modern Movement that influenced the practice of architecture everywhere.

After many well-founded efforts over 10 years, for recognition of the vital nature of LC’s legacy, the WHL candidacy is still waiting for final positive results. As stated at the 12th docomomo Council Meeting (Helsinki, 2012), “docomomo International confirms the outstanding universal value of architectural works by Le Corbusier and supports a serial nomination in the World’s Heritage List”. Therefore, we believe that the conclusion of the recognition process is urgent, as we all know that it will also guarantee the protection of invaluable architectural ensembles, as in the case of the perfectly balanced Capitol Complex in Chandigarh which is under threat (see p. 84).

Quoting Tim Benton, LC with exigent and permanent criticism “was somebody capable of renewing himself at every moment, [believing] in the universal value of architecture”5. Today, we could reformulate this universal value as the urgency to strive towards a sustainable future. That’s why docomomo chose “Adaptive Reuse: The Modern Movement towards the Future” as the main topic for the 14th International docomomo Conference that will take place in Lisbon from the 6th to the 9th September 2016, in order to pursuit the Modern Movement’s social and collective project engaged with the challenge of creating a better place to live in an ever faster changing world.

References:
1 Jean-Louis Cohen, Le Corbusier: La planète comme chantier, Paris, Editiones Textuel, 2005.
2 Le Corbusier, Vers une Architecture, Paris, Editions Crès, 1923.
3 Idem.
4 Le Corbusier, “L’espace indicible”, L’Architecture d’Aujourd’hui, Paris, Nov.–Dec., 1946.
5 “UNESCO World Heritage List: Le Corbusier Proposal Deferred”, docomomo Journal, 44, Barcelona, 2011, p. 89–90.

Additional information

Weight 0.450 kg
Dimensions 21 × 1 × 30 cm