ROBERT CHARLES VENTURI
1. LIFE AND TIME
June 25, 1925 FAMILY wife architect, planner, author, educator Denise Scott Brown. partner in the firm since 1969. collaborator in the evolution of architectural theory and BIRTH
1. LIFE AND TIME
EDUCATION
and A. there as a at the in Rome from
graduated summa cum laude from Princeton university in 1947 received M. F. in 1950. furthered his studies Rome prize Fellow American academy 1954 to 1956.
1. LIFE AND TIME
PROFESSION
b.
Philadelphia based architect who worked under Eero Saarinen and Louis Kahn. A writer, a teacher, an artist and philosopher, as well as an architect. In the past three decades since, he has lectured at numerous institutions including Yale, Harvard, UCLA, Rice and the American Academy in Rome.
c. d.
1. PHILOSOPHY
Famous for his response “less is a bore,” to modernist Mies van Der Rohe’s dictum, “less is more.”
“architecture is evolutionary as well as revolutionary. As an art it will acknowledge what is and what ought to be , the immediate and the speculative.”
He strongly believed that architects can try to ignore the honky- tonk elements in a building or even try to abolish them, but they will not go away. Architects do not have the power to replace them.
1. WORKS VANNA VENTURI HOUSE ,1961 chestnut hill, Pennsylvania POSTMODERN IN STYLE
VANNA VENTURI HOUSE
An explicitly classical building in the substance of its plan and form and in the ornament of its elevation. The inside spaces are complex both in shapes and inter-relationships. In contrast, the outside image is simple and consistent. The front creates an almost symbolic image of a house. The front and back elevation are classically symmetrical with strong centralities. The front elevation is a classical pediment.
VANNA VENTURI HOUSE
Some people say that the house looks like a child’ s drawing of a house- representing the fundamental elements of sheltergable roof, chimney, door and windows.
VANNA VENTURI HOUSE Plan is symmetrical, but the symmetry is distorted at times to accommodate the particular needs of the spaces.
GROUND FLOOR PLAN
FIRST FLOOR PLAN
VANNA VENTURI HOUSE
VANNA VENTURI HOUSE
VANNA VENTURI HOUSE Models for the proposed scheme
1. WORKS TUCKER HOUSE, 1974 ■
Westchester county, new York
TUCKER HOUSE
This was a house to look ordinary at first glance, but to extra ordinary at the second and while living in it.
A small house with big scale: its few parts are big and the form is simple, bold and symmetrical.
Recessive in color and shingle texture, sitting among the trees on its lush.
Semi rural site.
Building is tall and a wooden
FRONT ELEVATION
TUCKER HOUSE
The façade appears to dominated by a gable. Windows in the shingled walls are placed only to reflect interior demands. SECTION
TUCKER HOUSE PLANNING a hall which doubles as the dining area, a kitchen, a bedroom, and a bathroom arranged to serve both the bedroom and the public spaces.
GROUND FLOOR PLAN
a staircase, wider at the bottom, rises against one wall of the house, turning at the top to open into an extra ordinary wider living space. The fireplace structure echoes the shape of the house.
FIRST FLOOR PLAN
TUCKER HOUSE
VIEW OF LIVING FROM THE FIRST FLOOR
LIVING ROOM
1. WORKS GUILD HOUSE 1961 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
GUILD HOUSE
GROUND FLOOR PLAN
GUILD HOUSE
FIRST FLOOR PLAN
GUILD HOUSE
FRONT ELEVATION
GUILD HOUSE Small urban site. A 6 storey building which houses 91 apartments of varying types for elderly tenants who desired to remain in their old neighborhood. Conventional architectural elements, to accommodate budget constraints.
GUILD HOUSE MATERIAL The brick, an expensive red clay. The scale of windows also differs according to their distance from the street. Interior spaces are complex to suit the varying programme of he apartment house.
OTHER WORKS
The firm's addition for the Oberlin College art museum (shown above) is decked with a playful red and white checkerboard pattern. Tucked in a rear alcove is an oversized wooden column with an enormous "Ionic" capital.
There is a playful retro look to the Celebration, Florida bank building designed by Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brown. Molded to fit the shape of the street corner it occupies, the bank resembles a 1950s-era gas station or hamburger restaurant.
Postmodern addition to the Oberlin College art museum in Ohio, 1977 Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates
1. CHRONOLOGY OF WORKS
1962. The Vanna Venturi House, Chestnut Hill, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1972. Trubek House, Nantucket Island, Massachusetts 1973. Brant House, Greenwich, Connecticut 1973 to 1976. Allen Art Museum Addition, Oberlin, Ohio 1975. House in Tuckers Town, Bermuda. 1975. Tucker House, Mount Kisco, New York 1983. Gordon Wu Hall, Princeton, New Jersey 1994: Bank building in Celebration, Florida
Selected Awards: 1990. AIA Medal of Distinction, The Pennsylvania Society of Architects 1991. Pritzker Architecture Prize 1992. National Medal of Arts, U.S. Presidential award
THANK YOU