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  1. 29 de oct. de 2010 · Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown – two of the world's most influential living architects – are notorious for challenging Mies van der Rohe's ‘Less is More' mantra with ‘Less is a Bore', and leading the Post-Modernist movement with Venturi's manifesto, ‘Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture'. Now a rare insight into the couple's design philosophy is available at the Graham ...

  2. Denise Scott Brown is an architect, planner and urban designer and a theorist, writer and educator whose projects and ideas have influenced designers and thinkers worldwide. Working in collaboration with Robert Venturi over the last half century, she has guided the course of Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates by serving on the broad range of ...

  3. Working with his colleagues John Rauch and Denise Scott Brown, Venturi designed this house for a family of three in northern Delaware, drawing on the vernacular domestic architecture of the region. The design, he has said, is particularly indebted to classic eighteenth-century barns, but these traditional buildings served more as inspiration than as sources to be literally imitated.

  4. 12 de ago. de 2015 · Robert Venturi broke with the Modernists when he designed a home for his mother in the late 50s – and it is now credited as the first Postmodern building. ... fellow architect Denise Scott Brown.

  5. 5 de jun. de 2018 · There’s something irresistible about Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown’s architectural romance. They met when they were both young professors at the University of Pennsylvania; Scott Brown ...

  6. 6 de dic. de 2023 · Robert Venturi, John Rauch, and Denise Scott Brown, House in New Castle County, Delaware, 1978–83 (The Architectural Archives, University of Pennsylvania; photo: ... Robert Venturi, Denise Scott Brown, and Steven Izenour, Learning from Las Vegas (Cambridge: MIT Press, 1972).

  7. 12 de dic. de 2023 · Scott Brown also met fellow faculty member Robert Venturi in 1960, during a meeting in which she argued to preserve the university library, which had been designed by Frank Furness. Scott Brown left Penn in 1965 to teach in California, but when she and Venturi married in 1967, she returned to Philadelphia to join his firm, Venturi and Rauch.