


Le Corbusier Switzerland, 1887-1965
Les Dés sont jetés, 1956
Collage of gouache coloured paper, coloured papers, gouache, and China ink on laid paper
43.7 x 55.7 cm
17 1/4 x 21 7/8 in.
framed: 63 x 75 x 4 cm
17 1/4 x 21 7/8 in.
framed: 63 x 75 x 4 cm
Copyright The Artist
Further images
'Les Dés sont jetés' reflects the design of one of five murals painted inside designer and architect Eileen Gray's house in Southern France. Le Corbusier, a close friend of her...
'Les Dés sont jetés' reflects the design of one of five murals painted inside designer and architect Eileen Gray's house in Southern France. Le Corbusier, a close friend of her lover Jean Badovici, developed a deep fascination for E-1027. Following the separation of Gray and Badovici in 1932, Badovici became the owner of the house and frequently visited it with his wife. Contrary to Gray's desires, Le Corbusier, as a guest of Badovici, adorned the walls with murals. Despite attempting to acquire the house, the French-Swiss architect was unsuccessful. Instead, he bought nearby land and constructed a small cabin known as the Cabanon de vacances.
“There are no sculptors only, no painters only, no architects only; the plastic incident fulfils itself in an overall form in the service of poetry.” Le Corbusier, 1962
Born Charles-Édouard Jeanneret, the Swiss-born artist and architect better known as Le Corbusier made his name after moving to Paris in 1917. With the French painter Amédée Ozenfant he created and led a variation of the Cubist movement called Purism, where objects are represented as elementary forms devoid of detail. After 1925 the movement gave way to melodic figural compositions which would leave a lasting impact on the future generations of Abstract Expressionists. Le Corbusier’s influence has few parallels within the 20th century; his unique and visionary approach to art and architecture established a new modern vision for living that has become an integral part of 21st-century life. Drawing remained a central aspect of Le Corbusier’s multi-faceted artistic practice throughout his career as a means to express himself in a more personal manner, and as a vehicle through which to attain a pure form of poetry. It was an indispensable medium not only for communicating his utopian architectural visions but also for exercising his artistic and purely plastic ideas. His works on paper exhibited at The World of Le Corbusier: Collages and Drawings exemplify the artist's thoughts in the creative moment.
“There are no sculptors only, no painters only, no architects only; the plastic incident fulfils itself in an overall form in the service of poetry.” Le Corbusier, 1962
Born Charles-Édouard Jeanneret, the Swiss-born artist and architect better known as Le Corbusier made his name after moving to Paris in 1917. With the French painter Amédée Ozenfant he created and led a variation of the Cubist movement called Purism, where objects are represented as elementary forms devoid of detail. After 1925 the movement gave way to melodic figural compositions which would leave a lasting impact on the future generations of Abstract Expressionists. Le Corbusier’s influence has few parallels within the 20th century; his unique and visionary approach to art and architecture established a new modern vision for living that has become an integral part of 21st-century life. Drawing remained a central aspect of Le Corbusier’s multi-faceted artistic practice throughout his career as a means to express himself in a more personal manner, and as a vehicle through which to attain a pure form of poetry. It was an indispensable medium not only for communicating his utopian architectural visions but also for exercising his artistic and purely plastic ideas. His works on paper exhibited at The World of Le Corbusier: Collages and Drawings exemplify the artist's thoughts in the creative moment.
Provenance
- Le Corbusier,
- Madeleine Goisot, du début des années 1960 à environ 1985,
- Collection particulière, Grenoble, d’environ 1985 à 1994
- Collection particulière, Paris de 1994 à maintenant.
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