Le Corbusier supported France’s Revolutionary Fascist Party, backed Nazi ideas and held ‘hidden’ anti-Semitic beliefs, biographers say

The Villa Savoye in Poissy, on the outskirts of Paris. (Wikimedia)
The Villa Savoye in Poissy, on the outskirts of Paris. (Wikimedia)

 

AFP — Love him or loathe him, few people have changed the world we live in more than Le Corbusier, one of the fathers of modern architecture, whose works were placed Sunday on UNESCO’s prestigious World Heritage List.

Le Corbusier in 1933. (Wikimedia)
Le Corbusier in 1933. (Wikimedia)

His ideas about utilitarian concrete buildings have altered the face of cities across the planet and have had an equally profound influence on urban planning

From his modernist master planning of Chandigarh in northern India to Paris, which he dreamed of leveling to make way for his own more rational city, the Swiss-born designer was never afraid of thinking big.

He left his greatest mark on France, his adopted home, where no less than 10 of the 17 projects which UNESCO classified as world heritage sites are located.

From the La Cite Radieuse housing project in Marseille to the Dominican monastery of La Tourette near Lyon and La Villa Savoye near Paris, it is also where he left some of his greatest masterpieces.

His designs for functional apartment blocks surrounded by parks dominated France’s postwar urban planning until eight years after his death in 1965 when it became clear that many were depressing and anonymous, and blamed for urban alienation.

Vertical cities

“You have to put him in context,” said Vanessa Fernandez an expert at the Paris-Belleville School of Architecture. “He came from an incredible avant-garde in the 1930s” when building techniques had yet to catch up with architects’ ideas.

“After the war in the face of a baby boom and slum housing they had to build three million homes in 30 years.”

Some of his “vertical cities” were adored by their residents, particularly his Marseille block built in 1945.

When the Mediterranean city was made a European cultural capital three years ago, La Cite Radieuse was one of its most visited attractions.

Le Corbusier allowed light to bathe the double-aspect duplexes with their open plan kitchens, then a design revolution.

Inside everything was planned to Le Corbusier’s own human scale he called the “modular”, based on his ideal man, who, added Fernandez, was “handsome, sporty and six foot tall.”

Out-and-out fascist

The image, in fact, of the perfect Aryan. For the architect was also “an out-and-out fascist,” Xavier de Jarcy, one of his biographers told AFP last year.

Another biographer, Francois Chaslin, said he was a longtime far-right supporter, who was “active for 20 years in groups with a very clear ideology.”

He said his anti-Semitic beliefs were “kept hidden” long after his death to protect his architectural legacy.

The Open Hand Monument in Chandigarh, India. It is a recurring motif in Le Corbusier's architecture. (CC, BY-SA Ravjot Singh Uploaded to wiki by user:nikkul/Wikimedia)
The Open Hand Monument in Chandigarh, India. It is a recurring motif in Le Corbusier’s architecture. (CC, BY-SA Ravjot Singh Uploaded to wiki by user:nikkul/Wikimedia)

 

Soon after arriving in Paris in 1920 Le Corbusier hooked up with Pierre Winter, a doctor who headed France’s Revolutionary Fascist Party, and worked with him to create the urban planning journal “Plans.” When it closed, they started another called “Prelude.”

Jarcy said that Le Corbusier wrote in support of Nazi anti-Semitism in “Plans” and in “Prelude” co-wrote “hateful editorials.”

His 1925 urban plan to flatten the historic center of Paris included razing the Marais, a district long home to the capital’s Jewish community.

In October 1940, after France had fallen to the Nazis, Le Corbusier wrote to his mother, “Hitler can crown his life with a great work: the planned lay-out of Europe.”

Writer Marc Perelmen, who has investigated the architect’s ideas for more than three decades, said that Le Corbusiers’s political and architectural ideas “are viewed separately, whereas they are one and the same thing.”

As reported by The Times of Israel