
| Artist | Le Corbusier |
| Year | 1963 |
| Printer | Ateliers Mourlot, Paris |
| Venue | Château de Felletin, France |
| Size | 44 × 65 cm (17.3 × 25.6 in) |
| Type | Original vintage lithographic poster |
| Condition | A — Overall Good |
This is an original lithographic poster created in 1963 for an exhibition of tapestries by Le Corbusier at the Château de Felletin — a fitting venue, as Felletin, in the Creuse region of France, is one of the historic capitals of French tapestry weaving, home to workshops that have produced Aubusson tapestries for centuries.
Le Corbusier (1887–1965) is celebrated worldwide as the defining architect of the 20th century — the father of modern urbanism, the creator of the Unité d'Habitation and the Chapel of Ronchamp. What is less known is his profound engagement with the applied arts, and in particular with tapestry. From the 1930s onward, Le Corbusier designed a series of large-scale tapestries — what he called his muralnomads — conceived as portable, democratic alternatives to monumental painting. Bold, geometric, and vibrantly colored, they translate his architectural vision into textile form with remarkable power.
Printed by the Ateliers Mourlot in Paris, this poster was produced two years before Le Corbusier's death in August 1965 — making it one of the last exhibition posters of his lifetime, and a rare document of a dimension of his work that remains largely unknown to the general public.
A singular piece for the collector at the crossroads of architecture, textile art, and the golden age of French printmaking.