Brilliant
theorists who have changed the course of architecture more
than any other living architect(s), Robert Venturi and Denise
Scott Brown (or "Robert Venturi" as they are usually
collectively called) also design buildings. It is unfortunate
that their designs (while often individually strong) have
yet to capture populist realities as well as their writings.
Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture and
Learning from Las Vegas remain as important as
they were when first written, still required reading for
anyone who takes the profession seriously.
Vanna
Venturi House
(1964) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United
States
Just two years after Saarinen's TWA
Building and Alvar Alto's Finlandia Hall opened (and while
Mies' Neues Nationalgalerie and Kahn's Salk Institute were
still under construction), Robert Venturi was undercutting
modernism in ways that took decades to fully understand
at his Mom's house at Chestnut Hill, in the same neighborhood
as Louis Kahn's Esherick House but definitely a world away.
Fire
Station #4
(1968) Columbus, Indiana, United States
The people who work at the Columbus, Indiana Visitor Center
consider themselves fans of
architecture, living in a town lucky enough to have buildings
completed by at least two Saarinens. Still, try asking them
about the little fire station out of town and they'll tell
you they just don't get it. The brick pattern is irrespective
of the window locations and then there's that great big
four on the building. What's up with that?
Click here to go to the Columbus, Indiana architectural
visitor's site. Fire Station #4 is just out of downtown,
the people in the visitor's center will be happy to tell
you how to find it.
Gordon
Wu Hall
(1983) Princeton, New Jersey, United States
As Post Modernism raged (virtually) unchecked in the mid
80s, Robert Venturi's Gordon Wu Hall quietly proved the
difference between what he meant in his books and what everyone
else thought he wrote. A telling sign
is the ornamental graphic keystone with the control joint
running right down the middle. Think about that one.
Click here to go to the Butler College site at Princeton
University. The campus is worth a visit, besides Gordon
Wu Hall there are also a few buildings by Rafael Vinoly,
a good museum and (eventually) another Frank Gehry building
Sainsbury
Wing
(1991) London, United Kingdom
A big functional, modern building on the corner of Trafalgar
Square, the Sainsbury Wing of the National Gallery at first
glimpse looks like it has always been there. The facade
of the new building echoes the National Gallery's facade
and columns, but if you look closer its playful enough to
reveal itself as the billboard it is at just about every
corner.
Click here to go to the National Gallery site. The collection
is good (if you're into old paintings that all seem to look
alike) and the museum is free anyway. What more do you want?
Venturi, Scott
Brown and Associates
(VSBA)
Philadelphia, PA, US
Online at vsba.com
Robert Venturi
1925 born Philadelphia,
PA, US
1950 MFA Princeton Univ, NJ, US 1954
Rome Prize 1972
AIA Gold Medal 1984
AIA Gold Medal 1986
AIA Gold Medal
1991 Pritzker Prize
Denise
Scott Brown
1931 born Nkana, Zambia 1965
M Arch Univ of Penn, US 2002
Vincent Scully Prize
Publications
:
Architecture
as Signs and Systems for a Mannerist Time
by Robert Venturi and Denise Scott
Brown
(2004) Bellknap Press
Robert
Venturi and Denise Scott Brown are unabashed populists,
this new book continues their work by explaining how
buildings have always been signs and should continue
to be... (read
more)
Out of the Ordinary: Architecture/Urbanism
/Design
by David Bruce Brownlee (Editor), David
De Long, Kathryn B. Hiesinger, Robert Venturi (Editor),
Denise Scott Brown (Editor), Philadelphia Museum of
Art, San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art, Heinz Architectural
Center, David de Long
Publisher: Yale Univ Pr
(June 1, 2001)