In 1924, Mallet-Stevens published a magazine called
La Gazette Des 7 Arts and at the same time with the help of
Ricciotto Canudo founded the
Club des amis du 7ème art. A Paris street in the
16th arrondissement, Rue Mallet-Stevens, was built by him in the 1920s and has on it six houses designed by him. A portfolio of 32 of Mallet-Stevens' designs was published under the title
Une Cité Moderne in 1922. In addition to designing shops, factories, a fire station in Paris, apartment buildings, private homes, and interiors, he was one of the first architects to show an interest in cinema. He designed film sets and his design for
Marcel L'Herbier's silent film ''
L'Inhumaine'' (1924) is considered a masterpiece. In 1923 he was commissioned by Charles de Noailles to build the Villa Noailles located on the hill of the Château d'Hyères, the first core of which was completed in 1925 and whose extensions followed one another until 1933. "
It is part of the rationalist movement, favored at the time of Viollet le Duc. Modern in style, it is totally in line with the spirit of rationality and functionality. In this architecture, we celebrate a new art of living where the body and nature are privileged. It meets a simple objective: to let light in and make it the central element of the building". In 1929, surrealist photographer and filmmaker
Man Ray made a film inspired by his design for the buildings named "
Villa Noailles" entitled
The Mysteries of the Château de Dé. During his career he assembled a team of artisans and craftspeople who worked with him: interior designers, sculptors, master glaziers, lighting specialists, and ironsmiths. An example of his collaborative nature is provided by the
Union des Artistes Moderne (UAM), formed in 1929 by a group of 25 dissidents of the
Société des Artistes-Décorateurs (SAD). Mallet-Stevens was the UAM's first president. ==Legacy==