Charles-Édouard Jeanneret - Le Corbusier, 1887-1967 Scroll down for information. Click here to return to the list. |  | L'Oeuvre Plastique - Quatre Lithographies Originales.
Complete set of the four original lithographs in colours. 1932-38. Each signed and dated in the stones. As issued in the album Le Corbusier Oeuvre Plastique. (Issued impressions were only signed in the stone, as here). Issued edition of c.500 (but a large percentage lost during the war). There was also a special pencil signed edition of 100. Published by Morancé, Paris 1938. Very scarce as a complete set.
Note: To be included in the future Corbusier Oeuvre catalogue
Extremely fine fresh impressions with unfaded colours. Each on a sheet of stiff slightly glazed cream wove paper. Excellent condition. Printed to the sheet size at the sides and bottom; small margins at the head - as issued. Sheets: 8 1/2 x 10 5/8ins (215x270mm).
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The set of four lithographs in colour which Le Corbusier drew for Albert Morancé's monograph on his work in 1938 are perhaps his earliest works in the medium. The edition was issued in two forms, 100 impressions of each image signed in pencil and numbered, and the album edition which was signed only in the stones. The exact edition of the album issue is not recorded but it was probably not much more than 500. It is very scarce nowadays, probably because a large percentage of the edition was either lost or destroyed during the War. A complete matched set of the four lithographs (as here), even from the album issue, is very uncommon indeed.
By the late 1930's Le Corbusier had moved on from the 'purist' mechanical-inspired imagery of his 20's paintings to forms based on a monumental humanism. In 1925 in his theoretical essay 'Urbanisme' he proposed the revolutionary concept that architecture should be linked both in its use of form and in its use of space to the human shape and to social use. The monumental curving shapes with their emphasis on surface and texture and their links to humanity, and the dependence of building form on building use changed the whole course of 20th century architecture. In his art from 1930 onwards he reflected these same ideas. |
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