ARTS AND ARCHITECTURE October 1965. Le Corbusier “Les Des Sont Jetés” wraparound cover design.

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ARTS AND ARCHITECTURE
October 1965

David Travers [Editor]

David Travers [Editor]: ARTS AND ARCHITECTURE. Los Angeles: Arts and Architecture, Volume 82, number 9, September 1965. Slim quarto. Stapled printed wrappers. 40 pp. Illustrated articles and period advertisements. Mailing label to blank area of rear panel. Wrappers lightly scuffed and worn, especially to the rear panel corner [see scan]. Wraparound cover design: “Les Des Sont Jetés” by Le Corbusier. Interior unmarked, clean and lightly creased from reading, but a very good copy.

9.75 x 12.75 vintage magazine with 40 pages of editorial content and advertisements from leading purveyors of West Coast mid-century modernism, circa 1965.  In terms of decor, there is none of that Chippendale jive here-- every residential interior is decked out in full midcentury glory.

Layout credited to John Follis and John Gilchrest.

Contents

  • Le Corbusier
  • Ranch House: Hugo V. Neuhaus, Jr., Architect
  • The Perforated Wall: Myron H. Goldfinger
  • Apartment Building: Harry Seidler & Associates, Architects
  • University Arts Center: Mario Ciampi, Architect
  • The Boston Government Center: Paul D. Spreieregen
  • A Brief History Of The World Of War: Forrest Wilson
  • Italian Ceramic Tile
  • Art
  • Music
  • Books
  • Notes in Passing
  • Advertisements include a full-page color Knoll Associates ad, etc.

The Editorial Advisory Board included William Wilson Wurster, Richard Neutra, Isamu Noguchi, eero Saarinen, Gardner Dailey, Sumner Spaulding, Mario Corbett, Esther McCoy, John Funk, Gregory Ain, George Nelson, Gyorgy Kepes, marcel Breuer, Raphael Soriano, Ray Eames, Garret Eckbo, Edgar Kaufman, Jr. and others luminaries of the mid-century modern movement.

In 1938, John Entenza joined California Arts and Architecture magazine as editor. By 1943, Entenza and his art director Alvin Lustig had completely overhauled the magazine and renamed it Arts and Architecture. Arts and Architecture championed all that was new in the arts, with special emphasis on emerging modernist architecture in Southern California.

One of the pivotal figures in the growth of modernism in California, Entenza's most lasting contribution was his sponsorship of the Case Study Houses project, which featured the works of architects Thornton Abell, Conrad Buff, Calvin Straub, Donald Hensman, Charles Eames, Eero Saarinen, J. R. Davidson, A. Quincy Jones, Frederick Emmons, Don Knorr, Edward Killinsworth, Jules Brady, Waugh Smith, Pierre Koenig, Kemper Nomland,   Kemper Nomland Jr., Richard Neutra, Ralph Rapson, Raphael Soriano, Whitney Smith, Sumner Spaulding, John Rex, Rodney Walker, William Wilson Wurster, Theodore Bernardi and Craig Ellwood. Arts and Architecture also ran articles and interviews on artists and designers such as Jackson Pollock, Robert Motherwell, George Nakashima, George Nelson and many other groundbreakers.

Here is the story of the Les Des Sont Jetés tapestry reported last month in Australia’s ABC news by Mazoe Ford [March 29 2016]: “Sydney Opera House tapestry commissioned by Jorn Utzon arrives at its destination after 60 years”

Well before the sails of the Sydney Opera House were complete, architect Jorn Utzon was already thinking about how to decorate the inside of the building. Now almost 60 years later, one of the artworks he commissioned is finally on display.

The Sydney Opera House has publicly unveiled the Utzon/Le Corbusier tapestry — a work of art that Opera House chief executive Louise Herron described as a "collaboration between two of the 20th century's greatest architects for one of the 20th century's greatest buildings".

"In 1958 Jorn Utzon wrote to Le Corbusier to ask if he would like to help with the decoration of the Opera House, as he put it, and the result was this tapestry," Ms Herron told the ABC. At the time, Mr Utzon was a bold, young Danish architect whereas Le Corbusier was a well-renowned French-Swiss architect who was coming to the end of his career.

"Apparently the reason the tapestry is called Les Des Sont Jetes (The Dice Are Cast) is because when Le Corbusier saw Mr Utzon's design he thought 'this is the future of architecture'.

"[Le Corbusier] was so inspired by what he saw that he decided he would collaborate [with Mr Utzon], which is not something he usually did." The tapestry will hang in the Western Foyer of the Opera House, an interior that was designed by Mr Utzon.

"It injects the Utzon DNA back into the building — as you know Utzon left before the Opera House was complete ... [but] this is an original Utzon intention to have this tapestry at the Opera House."

The Les Des Sont Jetes was woven in France, but after Mr Utzon famously resigned from the Opera House project in 1966 it never made its way to Sydney

. It was due to be auctioned last year until Ms Herron was sent to rescue it, at the insistence of philanthropist Peter Weiss. "I said 'it mustn't go for auction, you must buy it' and Louise said 'how?' and I said 'get on a plane just do it'," Mr Weiss told the ABC.

"I said 'I'll put some money towards it and find other donors - it has to be bought, it has to come back home'."Long-time arts supporter Mr Weiss contributed the most money, but funds also came from other philanthropists, Opera House staff and the New South Wales Government.

Despite the $400,000 price tag, the tapestry was a little worse for wear after decades hanging in the Utzon family dining room in Denmark. Once it arrived in Sydney, Julian Bickersteth from International Conservation Services and his team were tasked with restoring it.

"Tapestries and food don't go terribly well together so there was a fair bit of splatter all over it," Mr Bickersteth said. "I don't think it had ever been cleaned in that time, it might have been lightly brushed down, but the challenge was to how safely to clean it to bring back the vibrancy of those incredible colours.

"That is a process that means literally putting it in a bath, but you can't do that until you have tested the colours to check none of them are going to run, and then you have to have the right PH of the detergents and the water we're using to ensure they stay locked in."

Seeing the Les Des Sont Jetes hanging in the Opera House for the first time was a particularly proud moment for Antony Moulis from The University of Queensland's School of Architecture. Without his research, it might never have happened.

"I discovered letters in 2006 at the Le Corbusier archive in Paris describing the commission that Utzon asked Le Corbusier to design this tapestry work for the Opera House," Dr Moulis said.

"It was a commission that very little was known about and I thought it was a commission that should be more well known.As I researched the letters I discovered that the work had been made in 1960 and sent to Utzon in Denmark, so it was a very exciting discovery."

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