Abstract:
This paper is concerned with two personalities, Le Corbusier and Nek Chand, occupying, as it would
appear, the extreme polarities of the creative spectrum, yet sharing the same geographic space of artistic
production. Following India's independence in 1947, and the untimely death of Matthew Nowicki that
marked the demise of the Mayer-Nowicki plan, Le Corbusier was invited by the first Indian Prime
Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru to design Chandigarh, a city which was to act as the new capital city of the
partitioned state of Punjab. Nek Chand - a self-taught sculptor - who began life as a road inspector
in Chandigarh at a time when the city was being built, constructed the Rock Garden in Chandigarh
- initially illegally and as a private hobby - out of found natural rocks and the fragmented remains
of the villages that once occupied the site of Chandigarh. The Garden set within 18 acres of modified
landscape and ceramic-clad terrain, exists at the edge of Chandigarh's Capitol Complex and consists
of over 3000 sculptures and architectural follies. It was discovered in 1972 and eventually legalised in
1976. The garden is still under development and continues to receive around 2000 visitors each day.
In spite of their widely differing backgrounds - Le Corbusier, already a world renowned architect,
well-travelled and widely read, and Nek Chand, a migrant from what is now the Pakistani part of
Punjab, a road inspector and a self-taught sculptor of limited education and experience - the Capitol
Complex and the Rock Garden share a common ground of aesthetics. As we explore and argue in this
paper, arriving from the opposite ends of the artistic horizon, their shared aesthetics is characterised by
a broad negation of the classical and modernist normative aesthetic tradition and vocabulary and the
embracing of primitivism, a fascination with the grotesque and the unfinished, and a tendency to treat
the identifiable components of the tectonics as elements of the aesthetic. Such an implicit questioning,
we argue, has been a key characteristic of avant-garde art movements from the early-twentieth
century. The two personalities enter the common critical territory from two distinct directions; while
Chandigarh is the result of a significant shift away from Le Corbusier's pre-war approach, that also
made the chapel at Ronchamp possible, Nek Chand began life as a self-taught 'Outsider Artist', whose
work was 'institutionalised' by post-independence Indian politics.
It is important to stress from the outset that the aim here is not to 'compare and contrast' the
two creative outputs. There are, of course, many areas where Le Corbusier has received criticism
(some of which we have discussed elsewhere Jackson 2003; Bandyopadhyay and Jackson 2007),
and Nek Chand's work has been positioned as an involuntary critique of Le Corbusier's Chandigarh
(Prakash 2002; Jackson 2003) however, the aim here is more delicate. It is the areas of overlap and
the superimposition of the creative processes of Le Corbusier and Nek Chand that will be discussed,
beginning with the natural rock collections and Le Corbusier's sketches, before considering the larger
built fabric. The Rock Garden is almost as old as the city of Chandigarh; the first objects were gathered
around 1958, a year before the city Edict was published. It has developed alongside the city, integrally
part of it and fabricated using the same materials, yet remaining distinct and peripheral. Leah Ulansey
in her review of Peter Burger's much celebrated work, 'Theory of the Avant-Garde', suggests that
Burger managed to recast, '. . . in the form of general theory of art some of the Avant-Garde's specific
concerns . . . : 1) the role of engagement (political commitment) of art; and 2) the self-critique of
art as an institution and the problematization of art's claim to autonomy, a claim . . . finding its apex
in 19th century Aestheticism' (Ulansey 1984: 1192). We suggest that the latent avant-gardism in Le
Corbusier's late work and the 'Outsider Artist' in Nek Chand, arriving from two opposed directions,
equally display political commitment and above all, question some of the established notions of
aesthetics.