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Le Corbusier and the Mystique of the USSR: Theories and Projects for Moscow, 1928-1936

hardcoverFebruary 24, 1992
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ISBN-13: 9780691040769 ISBN-10: 0691040761
Publisher
Princeton University Press
Binding
hardcover
Published
February 24, 1992
Weight
2.7 lbs
Dimensions
29.20×2.50×22.90 cm

About this book

Le Corbusier and the Mystique of the USSR: Theories and Projects for Moscow, 1928-1936 by Cohen, Jean-Louis. hardcover edition. ISBN: 9780691040769.

Le Corbusiers arrival in the USSR in October 1928 to build the Moscow headquarters for Centrosoyuz created an international sensation in both the artistic and political communities: finally the crusader of "machine-age architecture" was going to encounter this seemingly modern nation whose economy and culture were in the making. Viewing the Soviet Union as a "factory for blueprints," where his role as an international expert would at last be recognized, Le Corbusier soon met with disappointment when Soviet authorities rejected his urban plan for Moscow, which laid the groundwork for the "Ville Radieuse" (1930) and included designs for the 1932 Palace of Soviet competition. In this detailed, colorful account of the vicissitudes of Le Corbusiers Soviet adventure, translated from the French, Jean-Louis Cohen brings to light a whole cycle of transformations in the architects theoretical and design strategies while providing new interpretations of Soviet avant-garde culture. It was the USSR, Cohen maintains, that furnished Le Corbusier with one of his greatest sources of artistic inspiration and with an ideological pretext for the extraordinary and often frenzied assertion of his ambitions. All the leading Soviet intellectuals and architects of the period--Ilya Ehrenburg, Sergei Eisenstein, Moisei Ginzburg, El Lissitzky, and Alexander Vesnin--play major roles in this absorbing chronicle of hope and disillusion. Heretofore unpublished drawings and texts illuminate the controversies surrounding Le Corbusiers urban doctrine in the face of Soviet "disurbanization" and his violent opposition to the early stages of Stalins socialist realism.