Le Corbusier, the Noble Savage: Toward an Archaeology of Modernism
A new study of Le Corbusier's life and work show how the texture of the architect's chilhood environment and experiences imprinted his mature imagination and architecture.
This revelatory study is the most unexpected and vital piece of Le Corbusier scholarship to appear in years. Adolf Max Vogt looks to the early, formative years of the architect's life as a key to understanding his mature practice, taking aim at such fundamental riddles as "Where did his design vocabulary come from?" and "How was his aesthetic sense formed?"
Vogt's investigation of LC's early life and education not only reveals important, previously unacknowledged influences on specific projects such as the League of Nations headquarters and the Villa Savoye, but also suggests why LC throughout his career preferred to lift buildings above the ground, to give them the appearance of "floating." By uncovering crucial dimensions of LC's early life and resurrecting primary documents and source materials overlooked by other scholars, this book changes the face of LC studies.
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Table of Contents
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Part I: "The Weight of Things"—Does It Count Longer Than the Name of Things?
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Part II: A Hymn in Praise of Pilotis—and in Praise of Jean-Jacques Rousseau
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Part III: The Fisherman's Hut and the Huts of the Crannoges
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Part IV: The Swiss Lake-Dwelling Fever
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Part V: LC's Early School Years and Their Dreams of Primary Origins
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Part VI: Why LC "Knows" What Modernism Is
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