Completed in 1967 two years after his death, Le Corbusier's last building seems very strange in the context of the huge volume of his work that preceded it, whether the Purist phase of white cubic forms or the later work of organic forms and rough concrete. This museum dedicated to his work, commissioned by Heidi Weber, nevertheless displays plenty of long term Corbusian themes: raw concrete, ramps, extensive glazing, spatial dynamics, but is also an entirely new architectural synthesis. It has (almost unique in his work) an exposed steel frame, and the dislocation of a wildly expressive roof hanging over its orthogonal structure. And more surprising is its apparent quotation of others' work : the colours of De Stijl, which are its strongest visual element, and the modular metal box form of Jean Prouve. It's also looking forward- extraordinarily- to work to come much later; the fragmented forms of Zaha Hadid or Daniel Libeskind in its roof structure, and even the coloured downpipes of Richard Rogers. It has, from inside, the feel and scale of an extraordinary domestic space: the 'problem' of the house was for him and most other modern architects a crucial ongoing project. So a fitting work to bookend his career, which started and finished in his native Switzerland. It's a visual compendium of many of the themes of Modernism, by the architect frequently termed the greatest of the 20th century.
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Born in Rome in 1907, Luigi Moretti built consistently during both the Fascist period and the post war period of Italian reinvention. What is most extraordinary in buildings of the 1950s and 60s is his originality, a playful inventiveness that used the forms of modern architecture: but rather than copying them, which most of his contemporaries did, turned them into a language to be subverted and re-thought. In the Girasole flats in Rome, the apartment block (with strip windows and unadorned white walls) is raised above a rough and primitive base, with a narrow gash in the centre of its thin and separated facade, and is topped by an asymmetrical split pediment. Thus he created a kind of Mannerism in modern architecture, and indeed set the scene for the full-blown Postmodernism later developed by Robert Venturi, who acknowledged the inspiration of Moretti's design. In the mid 1950s Moretti designed a development of a small site in the commercial heart of Milan, with four separate blocks both commercial and residential. A slim wedge-shaped block juts over the street line, while each building is distinctly and expressively detailed in the modernist formal language. He showed this great ingenuity at a time when most other architects were designing dull copies of SOM's Lever House in New York in similar urban contexts !
Zaha Hadid was the most original architect of her generation, whose work emerged from a new synthesis of Modernism she experienced while a student at the Architectural Association School in the late 1970s. Influenced by her tutors, Rem Koolhaas and Elia Zenghelis, she soon developed her own interpretation of an alternate modern tradition based on the Suprematist and Constructivist traditions- highly visible in art, but almost entirely unrealised in architecture. Winning numerous architectural competitions in the 1980s, starting with the Peak club in Hong Kong (1983), her exhilarating drawings and large-scale paintings were inspiring and exciting. But while a few small projects were realised, her work was largely developed in graphic and theoretical terms until the late 1990s. The translation of her work into large-scale built form, including the London Olympic Aquatics Centre and BMW in Munich, has not been without its problems, but it may be the Museum of the 21st century in Rome- MAXXI- is the most successful in realising the dynamic spaces that her early designs represented. She spoke of the building as a field, of the flows and pathways that create this fluid continuity of spaces: that the building was not a static enclosure, but a temporary crystallisation of forces. Surely an appropriate vehicle for the presentation of contemporary art, and despite what some have said, on my recent (and first) visit it seemed to work well as a place to show art, but also as a dynamic experience of space.
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