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Chandigarhs Le Corbusier: The
Struggle for Modernity in Postcolonial India, by Vikramaditya Prakash.
Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2002, 179 pages, $35.
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Why do we need another book about Le Corbusier? Since
well before his death in 1965, the prolific French-Swiss architect has
been the center of a virtual industry of publications about his work.
In the case of Prakashs book, the answer is that while Le Corbusier
as the hero (or villain) of Western architecture is a story that has often
been told, his ambiguous standing outside of Europe and North America
has seldom been thoughtfully considered. Although the Punjabi provincial
capital of Chandigarh has not been the model for future Indian urbanization
that Le Corbusier intended, his deep interest in the problem of creating
a monumental government complex for a new state in the first modern postcolonial
nation has had many consequences for architecture around the world.
Prakash intends his book to be accessible not only
to architects but also, as he puts it, to "multiple audiences in history
and theory," including those interested in the history of South Asia in
particular. His own background as the son of one of the Indian architects
involved with the design of Chandigarh has both advantages and disadvantages.
While he tries to keep in mind that the general reader has little knowledge
of Le Corbusiers work, modern India, or postcolonial theory, the
book in fact requires some knowledge of all three to be appreciated. Nevertheless,
Chandigarhs Le Corbusier offers a welcome introduction to the complexities
of the intersections between Modern art and architecture and the non-Western
world. Colonialist appropriation and condescension were usually part of
such encounters, yet at the same time Le Corbusiers work in India
ushered in a new paradigm for architecture whose effects in India still
resonate. Charles Correas assertion that perhaps someday Le Corbusier
"will be acknowledged
as the greatest Indian architect of them
all" is now a widely shared view. Thousands of buildings ranging from
the works of Correa and another member of the Chandigarh team, Balkrishna
Doshi, to those of less well known figures such as Achyut Kanvinde, Shivnath
Prasad, Jeet Malhotra, Harbinder Singh Chopra, Rajinder Kumar, and dozens
of others testify to Le Corbusiers influence on Indian architecture,
which is now a historical fact regardless of ones opinion of his
work and legacy.
Prakash notes that for Prime Minister Jawaharlal
Nehru, Le Corbusiers patron, the old Indian nationalist opposition
between "Indian" and "European" was replaced by a dialectic between "tradition"
and "modernity." Like Nehru, Le Corbusier was interested in negotiating
between these newly articulated polarities, rather than simply imposing
a European model, which explains much of the veneration he inspired in
India. As postcolonialist views have emerged, this veneration now appears
to some as an embarrassing relic of colonialism. It is to Prakashs
credit that he tries to steer between glib dismissal and adulation as
he moves beyond the familiar oppositions of awestruck Corbu-worship and
easy postmodern rejection. At the same time, there is something a little
disappointing about a book on Chandigarh that for the most part still
traverses the familiar visual terrain of the capitol complex, rather than
looking more broadly at the phenomenon of its influence in India.
By Eric Mumford
Click
here to read LeCorbusier's definition of a
new architecture for America from the pages of ARCHITECTURAL RECORD,
August 1929.
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Le Corbusier: Architect of the
Twentieth Century, by Kenneth Frampton, with photographs by Roberto
Schezen. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 2002, 208 pages, $65.
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The second of two books the eminent Columbia
University critic and historian has published recently on Le Corbusier,
this volume consists mainly of recent large-format photographs by Roberto
Schezen. They amply illustrate 17 well-known projects, which range from
the architects Purist villas of the 1920s to the late work in France
and India.
Schezens photographs are accompanied by short
texts that describe the circumstances of the design of each work and,
in some cases, the later vicissitudes of the buildings. The book is a
useful visual resource, and the texts concisely synthesize a great deal
of historical material from other sources, much of it still only available
in French. These brief chapters are clear and informative, and the book
serves as a good introduction for those unfamiliar with Corbus work.
One can argue with some of the projects omitted:
the Curruchet House in Argentina (1949), the "regionalist" houses in France
from the 1930s, and the Brazilian Ministry of Education and Health in
Rio (193642), designed with Oscar Niemeyer, Lúcio Costa,
Affonso Reidy. The featured works, however, which include the Villa Savoye,
the Swiss Pavilion dormitory, the Unité in Marseilles, Ronchamp,
Chandigarh, and the monastery of La Tourette, are well documented, and
the photographs reveal new aspects of Le Corbusiers widely varying
design responses over his long career.
The book also includes many of Corbus conceptual
sketches, which help to explain the ideas behind the work and address
issues of site and climate in immediately comprehensible ways. Le Corbusier:
Architect of the Twentieth Century makes a strong case for the masters
continuing importance to architectural design in the 21st century.
By Eric Mumford
Click
here to read LeCorbusier's definition of a
new architecture for America from the pages of ARCHITECTURAL RECORD,
August 1929.
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