“Here is the great problem facing the French government. We are in the hands of a conqueror whose attitude could be devastating. If he is sincere in his promises, Hilter could crown his life by an overwhelming creation: the accommodation of Europe. This is a stake that may tempt him, rather than a preference for a fruitless vengeance… Personally I believe the outcome could be favorable. France, barring a criminal transplantation or a German invasion, is a mouthful not to be chewed, and if the problem consists of assigning each nation its role, getting rid of the banks, solving real—realistic—tasks, the prognosis is good. It would mean the end of speeches from the tribunal, the endless meetings of committees, of parliamentary eloquence and sterility. Such a revolution will be made in the direction of order and not without consideration of human conditions” (Weber, Nicholas F. Le Corbusier: A Life. New York: Knopf, 2008. 487).
Was Le Corbusier A Fascist?
DATE: 07 OCT 2010 in http://www.artlyst.com/academic-articles/was-le-corbusier-a-fascist
Letters published in a 2008 biography of the seminal 20th century modern master, Architect and Painter suggest that the radical urban planner was a Nazi sympathizer whose Fascist thinking went above and beyond previously documented perceptions. In one letter written shortly after Hitler conquered France and much of Western Europe, the Swiss-born architect expresses clear enthusiasm for his intervention. In a letter written to his Mother Corbusier wrote, "If he is serious in his declarations, Hitler can crown his life with a magnificent work: the remaking of Europe." This is not entirely surprising in light that Le Corbusier aligned himself with the French far-right in the 1930s and accepted a post as a city planner for the Vichy regime that ruled France and collaborated with Nazi Germany during World War II.
Born Charles Edouard Jeanneret in the Swiss town of La Chaux-de-Fonds, Corbusier thought of himself as a visionary who could reshape mankind by creating a new form of city. Many other respected French Artists including, Andre Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck, and Kees van Dongen flirted with Fascism before and during the war. It doesn’t make them better or poorer at their craft, but in our present society it casts a shadow over their accomplishments as Artists. Separating Art and politics is a difficult concept. Perhaps we should just accept and honour Artists for their artistic merits, disregarding personal beliefs and actions during times of sweeping political change. Picasso was a committed communist and reflecting on the murderous trail of Josef Stalin’s rein of terror in Europe, his work has never been scrutinized in the same light as Derain, Vlaminck and VanDongen. Picasso was also part of the resistance to the Vichy Government bravely refusing to leave his studio in Paris for the duration of the war. In many ways he is regarded as a National Hero for his commitment to a free France. This latest bash at Le Corbusier is proof that, 'the wrong politics' can be detrimental to an Artist’s legacy. Corbusier’s face adorns the 10 Franc Swiss note and several Swiss cities have honoured him by naming streets and squares after the master. However, in light of these latest revelations, Zurich authorities decided not to name a square next to the central train station after the Architect. The authorities believe that this was a reasonable response to a delicate subject. The debate continues.
Why Politics Matter: Le Corbusier, Fascism, and UBS
10AUG2011 by Samuel
Jacobson Articles Politics Theory and History Anti-Semetism Fascism Le
Corbusier Switzerland UBS / http://www.archdaily.com/149885/why-politics-matter-le-corbusier-fascism-and-ubs/
Le Corbusier’s politics are a divisive issue for architects
and rightly so: his work is still highly influential, in both adoration and
enmity, and his expressed political views are at odds with contemporary western
democratic values.
It’s easy for the discussion of those views to lapse into a
sort of ethical debate by-proxy, devolving into a discussion about whether or
not Le Corbusier should continue to be included in the canon of twentieth
century architects considering his apparent anti-Semetism and sympathy for the
Nazi party. Such narrow and moralistic inquiry negates other issues pertinent
to Le Corbusier’s place in history. It
is possible to both be aware of Le Corbusier’s political affiliations and to
discuss his work as an architect, urbanist, and designer for its own merits. By
way of explanation, I would like to revisit a recent controversy concerning Le
Corbusier.
Swiss bank UBS dropped an ad campaign featuring the
Neuchâtel-born architect on September 29, 2010; personal correspondence
suggesting that the architect was a Nazi sympathizer was frequently cited as
context for UBS’s decision. A widely-circulated AP article on the UBS campaign,
“Nazi Praise Sparks Swiss Rethink of Le Corbusier” by Bradley S. Klapper,
quotes an October 1940 letter from Le Corbusier to his mother. “One letter
shows Le Corbusier expressing clear enthusiasm for Hitler,” Klapper writes, “
even if at other times he calls the German leader a monster. ‘If he is serious
in his declarations, Hitler can crown his life with a magnificent work: the
remaking of Europe.’” Nicholas Fox
Weber’s translation of the letter in his 2008 biography, Le Corbusier: A Life,
is equally damning, and worth quoting at length:
“Here is the great problem facing the French government. We
are in the hands of a conqueror whose attitude could be devastating. If he is
sincere in his promises, Hilter could crown his life by an overwhelming
creation: the accommodation of Europe. This is a stake that may tempt him,
rather than a preference for a fruitless vengeance… Personally I believe the
outcome could be favorable. France, barring a criminal transplantation or a
German invasion, is a mouthful not to be chewed, and if the problem consists of
assigning each nation its role, getting rid of the banks, solving
real—realistic—tasks, the prognosis is good. It would mean the end of speeches
from the tribunal, the endless meetings of committees, of parliamentary
eloquence and sterility. Such a revolution will be made in the direction of
order and not without consideration of human conditions” (Weber, Nicholas F. Le
Corbusier: A Life. New York: Knopf, 2008. 487).
As Klapper states in his article, such fascist inclinations
should not come as a surprise for anyone familiar with Le Corbusier’s life, “as
it has long been known that Le Corbusier aligned with the French far-right in
the 1930s and accepted a post as a city planner for the Vichy régime that ruled
France and collaborated with Nazi Germany during World War II.”
The campaign in question was intended to woo back clients
who left UBS during the 2008 financial crisis. UBS was bailed out by the Swiss
government in late 2008, but posted strong results in the first quarter of
2009. Advertisements ran across Europe and Asia, and featured an ad showing a
black-and-white photo of Le Corbusier holding his head with the captions:
“Because we’ve drawn a clear line” and “We want to deal with our past and look
with confidence into the future.” The decision to drop Le Corbusier from the
UBS campaign came after Jewish groups, including Schweiz-Israel, accused Le
Corbusier of being an anti-Semite. This hit a raw nerve with the bank, which
suffered a crisis in the 1990s over revelations that it prevented Jewish
claimants from accessing Holocaust-era accounts belonging to their ancestors,
leading to a $1.25 billion settlement. The connections between the ad, the
October 1940 letter, and UBS’s past abuses are obvious, although probably
unintentional. According to Jean-Raphael Fontannaz, spokesperson for the Swiss
banking giant, the company dropped advertisements featuring the architect
because controversy undermined the goals of the campaign. “For UBS, the most
important thing in our campaign is the message we wish to communicate,” he said
in a September 2010 statement. “We don’t want the message to be lost in a
discussion about Le Corbusier. We also don’t wish to hurt the feelings of anyone.”
It’s easy to dismiss the UBS affair as too moralistic or
nationalistic for our concern as architects. In this case, I am not interested
so much in the particulars of the controversy and its various ethical
entanglements but rather how UBS dealt with the problem at hand. Considering
the tenor of the campaign, it was a pragmatic and acceptable choice on the part
of the bank to remove Le Corbusier from their ad campaign—the associations with
Nazism and anti-Semitism are too much of a distraction. It is clear in
Fontannaz’s statement that the bank’s decision was not a judgment about Le
Corbusier’s worth as an architect, or as an important Swiss figure. For that reason it’s understandable that the
UBS decision was not followed by a similar decision the Swiss 10 franc bill, as
some thought might happen. Similarly, Le Corbusier’s political views have not
affected his removal from architecture’s historical record.
It can be said that Le Corbusier’s politics have little
meaningful bearing on his worth as an architectural genius. Architecture is
primarily concerned with the production of built objects or spaces; more than
anything else it is an aesthetic practice. It is worth noting that, according
to Nathan Fox Weber, nearly 400 architectural monographs on Le Corbusier’s work
had been published by the time he released his book in 2008. His was the first
full-length biography. Architects seem to be more interested in Le Corbusier’s
body of work than Le Corbusier the man. As a historical figure, then, all we
are really left of Le Corbusier is genius in the sense of guiding character or
spirit. This is not to discount the value of the political in his work. One can
argue that Le Corbusier’s work as an urbanist,
for example Ville Radiuse and
Ferme Rediuese, were at least in part intended as spatial models for the
industrial syndicalism fashionable among the French far-right in the 1930s and
40s. However, it also possible to evaluate these projects outside of a
political context. I cannot in good conscience go so far as to say that the
political ambitions of Le Corbusier and his work are irrelevant, especially
from a historical perspective, but considering our field’s aesthetic tendencies
Le Corbusier’s controversial views are only important insofar as they are
controversial.
Le Corbusier’s work continues to have value because it can
be and has been recognized repeatedly and in a wide range of contexts. Whether
that recognition is praise, pilgrimage, or scorn is irrelevant except in as
much as the three seem to feed back into one another. It is for this reason
that Le Corbusier’s politics matter—because they really don’t, as such, in
particular, but do as a means for gaining recognition. Whether one believes
that his fascist, anti-Semitic, and anti-humanist beliefs are latent in his
work, and that that is repulsive and as such his work repugnant; or one
believes that his designs, in their focus on light, material, and personal
expression are in fact humanist in nature and for that he deserves apology or
even simply praise; or one simply tries to emulate his work, who cares why, any
discussion thereof provides the sort of outside recognition that architecture
needs in order to have worth—and it is because Le Corbusier and his work are
discussed to such a great extent that he is an architectural genius. Unless one
is concerned with matters of the historical record, the particulars of Le
Corbusier’s political views don’t really matter—he is an important figure, and
will remain so until people stop talking about him.
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