JEREMY ERIC TENENBAUM
Denise Scott Brown has shaped the course of contemporary architecture since the 1960s. She is particularly well known for u003ciu003eLearning from Las Vegasu003c/iu003e, an enormously successful research project with her companion in life and work, Robert Venturi, and Steven Izenour, which challenged the way many architects saw the city. Widely cited and sometimes misunderstood, Scott Brown's insistence that we cast a critical eye on modernism ignorant of context, history, and joint creativity remains impactful today. As a new generation of architects and urban planners face a new set of environments and challenges, the time has never been more ripe to rediscover her undogmatic formal language and careful urban interventions.u003cbru003e u003cbru003e The first book to focus exclusively on Denise Scott Brown, u003ciu003eYour Guide to Downtown Denise Scott Brown Brownu003c/iu003e reaches beyond that foundational part of her work. It offers an entirely new way to view her achievements more broadly as an architect, urban planner, theorist, and educator. The book takes readers through her childhood in 1930s South Africa and her education in 1950s England, to her well-known work in photography, her writings and studies, and her work as an architect and urban planner on four continents. Lavishly illustrated, the book features a wealth of previously unpublished material, most of it in full color.u003cbru003e