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  • Maurizio Lazzarato

    Governing by Debt

  • Slavs and Tatars

    Mirrors for Princes

  • Benjamin H. D. Buchloh

    Formalism and Historicity. Models and Methods in Twentieth-…

  • Blaine Brownell, Marc Swackhamer

    Hypernatural. Architecture's New Relationship with…

  • David Maroto, Joanna Zielińska (Ed.)

    Artist Novels. The Book Lovers Publication

  • Franco »Bifo« Berardi

    Der Aufstand. Über Poesie und Finanzwirtschaft

  • Claire Doherty (Ed.)

    Out of Time, Out of Place. Public Art (Now)

  • Anthony Gardner

    Politically Unbecoming. Postsocialist Art against Democracy

  • Monika Rinck

    Risiko und Idiotie. Streitschriften

  • Kristien Ring, AA Projects, SenStadtUm…

    Urban Living. Strategien für das zukünftige Wohnen

  • Annette Kelm

    Subjects and Objects

  • Lou Cantor, Clemens Jahn (Eds.)

    Turning Inward

  • Ina Conzen (Hg.)

    Oskar Schlemmer. Visionen einer neuen Welt

  • Shumon Basar, Douglas Coupland, Hans…

    The Age of Earthquakes. A Guide to the Extreme Present

  • Hilde van Gelder (Ed.)

    Allan Sekula. Ship of Fools/The Dockers' Museum

  • Lisa Lee (Ed.)

    Isa Genzken (October Files)

  • John Miller

    Mike Kelley. Educational Complex

  • David Adjaye

    Form, Heft, Material

  • Shumon Basar, Douglas Coupland, Hans…

    Erschütterung der Welt. Leitfaden für die extreme Gegenwart

  • Bill Dietz

    Bill Dietz. 8 Tutorial Diversions, 2009 - 2014

  • Sigrid Weigel

    Grammatologie der Bilder

  • Joseph Vogl

    Der Souveränitätseffekt

  • Marco Ornella

    9999. An Alternative to One-Way Architecture

  • Manuel Herz (Ed.)

    African Modernism

  • Elisa van Joolen

    Elisa van Joolen. 11"x17" Reader

  • Gregoire Chamayou

    Drone Theory

  • Lisa Smirl

    Spaces of Aid. How Cars, Compounds and Hotels shape…

  • Louise Bourgeois

    I Have Been to Hell and Back

  • Marc-Camille Chaimowicz

    Madame Bovary

  • Philipp Felsch

    Der lange Sommer der Theorie. Geschichte einer Revolte 1960…

  • Luis Carranza, Fernando Lara

    Modern Architecture in Latin America. Art, Technology, and…

  • Adrian George

    The Curator's Handbook. Museums, Commercial Galleries…

  • Renate Lorenz (Ed.)

    Not Now! Now! Chronopolitics, Art & Research

  • Anne Waak

    Hartz IV und wir

  • Anna-Sophie Springer & Etienne…

    Fantasies of the Library

  • Anna-Sophie Springer & Etienne…

    Land & Animal & Nonanimal

  • Raumlaborberlin (Ed.)

    Art City Lab. Neue Räume für die Kunst

  • Jean-Paul Martinon (Ed.)

    The Curatorial. A Philosophy of Curating

  • Ulrike Gerhardt, Susanne Husse (Hg.)

    The Forgotten Pioneer Movement: Guidebook

  • SCALE

    Einrichten und Zonieren. Raumkonzepte, Ausbau, Materialität

  • Susanne Hauser, Claus Dreyer (Hg.)

    Das Konkrete und die Architektur

  • Harald Bodenschatz, Piero Sassi, Max…

    Urbanism and Dictatorship. A European Perspective

  • Chris Tedjasukmana

    Mechanische Verlebendigung. Ästhetische Erfahrung im Kino

  • Isabell Lorey

    State of Insecurity. Government of the Precarious

  • Paolo Virno

    Deja Vu and the End of History

  • Robert Delaunay

    Sonia Delaunay. Fashion and Fabrics

  • Maria Zinfert (Hg.)

    Siegfried Kracauer. Fotoarchiv

  • Christian Thun-Hohenstein (Ed.)

    Wege der Moderne. Josef Hoffmann, Adolf Loos und die Folgen…

  • Olivia de Oliveira

    Lina Bo Bardi. Built Work. Obra construida

  • Eduard Sancho Pou

    Function Follows Strategy. Architects' Strategies from…

  • Orit Halpern

    Beautiful Data

  • Manfred Mohr, Margit Rosen

    Der Algorithmus des Manfred Mohr

  • Stephanie Kloss

    Weltausstellung

  • Robin Mackay (Ed.)

    Collapse: Philosophical Research and Development: Casino…

  • Gregory J. Markopoulos

    Film as Film. The Collected Writings of Gregory J.…

  • Andrea Büttner

    Immanuel Kant. Kritik der Urteilskraft

  • Andri Gerber

    Metageschichte der Architektur. Ein Lehrbuch für angehende…

  • Hans Ulrich Obrist

    Kuratieren!

  • Steven Shaviro

    The Universe of Things. On Speculative Realism

  • Florian Böhm, Annahita Kamali

    Everything is Connected. Home Collection (Vitra)

  • Eva Diaz

    The Experimenters. Chance and Design at Black Mountain…

  • Berlin Projects

    Startup Berlin Guide

  • David Ostrowski

    How to do things left

  • Honore De Balzac

    The Physiology of the Employee

  • Francesco Spampinato

    Come Together. The Rise of Cooperative Art and Design

  • Marc Fischer

    Public Collectors

  • Joël Tettamanti

    Works 2001–2019

  • S AM 12

    Translations

  • Wilfried Dickhoff, Marcus Steinweg (Hg.)

    INAESTHETICS #4 Philosophy!

  • Marc Bedarida (Ed.)

    Le Corbusier. Aventures Photographiques

  • Markus Weisbeck, Mathias Schmitt,…

    Space for Visual Research

  • Gina Glover, Geof Rayner, Jessica Rayner

    The Metabolic Landscape. Perception, Practice and the…

  • Ricardo Flores & Eva Prats

    Thought by Hand. The Architecture of Flores & Prats

  • Sylvain Margaine

    Forbidden Places, Volume 2: Exploring Our Abandoned Heritage

  • Mark Leckey

    On Pleasure Bent

  • Axel Wieder, Florian Zeyfang (Eds.)

    Open Form. Space, Interaction, and the Tradition of Oskar…

  • Maria Zinfert (Hg.)

    Sigfried Kracauer. Photographic Archive

  • Clog

    World Trade Center

  • Marta Herford (Ed.)

    Der entfesselte Blick. The Unfettered Gaze: Die Brüder…

  • Hubertus Butin (Hg.)

    Begriffslexikon zur zeitgenössischen Kunst (Ausgabe 2014)

  • Peter Blegvad

    Kew. Rhone

  • Michiel van Raaij

    Building as Ornament

  • Reinhard Seiss

    Harry Glück: Wohnbauten

  • Cristina Bechtler (Ed.)

    Museum of the Future

  • Felix Ensslin, Charlotte Klink (Eds.)

    Aesthetics of the Flesh

  • Matthew Gandy

    The Fabric of Space. Water, Modernity, and the Urban…

  • Catherine De Zegher

    Women's Work. Is Never Done

  • Sophie Berrebi

    The Shape of Evidence. Contemporary Art and the Document (…

  • Simon Denny

    New Management

  • Henning Schmidgen

    Hirn und Zeit. Die Geschichte eines Experiments 1800 - 1950

  • Paul O'Neill & Mick Wilson (Ed…

    Curating Research

  • Hans-Jürgen Hafner, Gunter Reski (Hg.)

    The Happy Fainting of Painting. Ein Reader zur…

  • Thomas Crow

    The Long March Of Pop. Art Music and Design 1930-1995

  • Chris Kraus

    Torpor (Roman)

  • Gerald Raunig

    DIVIDUUM. Maschinischer Kapitalismus und molekulare…

  • Marc James Léger (Ed.)

    The Idea of the Avant Garde And What It Means Today

  • Jean-Luc Godard

    Jean-Luc Godard/JLG: Selbstporträt im Dezember

  • Dombois, Fliescher, Mersch, Rintz (Hg.)

    Ästhetisches Denken. Nicht-Propositionalität, Episteme,…

Le Corbusier. A Life

Several hundred pages into his exhaustive, fascinating biography of brilliant and manic architect, painter, and theorist Le Corbusier, Nicholas Fox Weber quotes Le Corbusier contemporary Stefan Zweig's contention that "supreme achievement and outstanding capacity are only rendered possible by ... a sublime monomania that verges on lunacy." The age of "No Drama" Obama might herald respite from the notion that Great Men with Great Ideas are by necessity megalomaniacal kooks, but Weber's work provides ample evidence that the theory will not die easily.
Quoting primarily from Le Corbusier's letters, Weber connects the architect's prodigious output and massive influence with the specific ways he embodied the sort of exhilarating anxiety and ego-freakery we've come to associate with the birth of modernism. There is, for instance, the bizarre relationship between the architect and his mother, to whom he sent screeds, obsequious praise, ruminations on his sexual hang-ups, and nude sketches of himself and who for the most part reserved her affection for his less successful brother. Equally telling is his treatment of his troubled wife, Yvonne, whom he praised for her beauty and domestic skills while infantilizing and exoticizing her. He disavowed his uptight homeland and Swiss Calvinist family – declaring himself Mediterranean at heart, changing his birth name (Charles-Édouard Jeanneret), and becoming a French citizen – while indulging in a Northern European predilection for order and rigor. Volumes have been written about Corbusier's work and influence; his integration of buildings, light, and nature; his transposition of monastic simplicity to public environments; his rooftop gardens; his ideas about providing nurturing, affordable housing for the masses; and his much-misunderstood concept of buildings as "machines for living."
In contrast, Weber has written the first complete account of Le Corbusier's life itself, and while important works are discussed, he keeps elaborate descriptions and aesthetic treatises to a minimum. Instead, in elegant prose that foregrounds its subject, Weber recounts amusing, chronic problems with commissions, permits, and roof leaks; Le Corbusier's notoriously difficult personality at work; affairs with Josephine Baker and various heiresses; and, crucially, his later-downplayed involvement with Vichy France (seemingly mainly a matter of betting on the wrong horse). The question of whether the ridiculous behavior and disastrous alliances were necessary is rendered moot; what emerges is a life lived to the fullest extent – and engineered for the greatest impact – possible.
Book Review by Cindy Widner (Austin Chronicle)


Nicholas Fox Weber
Le Corbusier. A Life
Alfred a Knopf , 2008, 978-0375410437