Cape Breton Post

Robert Venturi, postmodern­ist architect, dies at 93

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Architect Robert Venturi, who rejected austere modern design and instead ushered in postmodern complexity with the dictum “Less is a bore,’’ has died. He was 93.

His family released a statement on his firm’s website saying Venturi died at home in Philadelph­ia on Tuesday after a brief illness, surrounded by his wife, the architect Denise Scott Brown, and son, James Venturi.

He remained active well into his 80s at Venturi, Scott Brown & Associates, the architectu­ral firm he founded in the 1960s. It’s now known as VSBA Architects + Planners.

“All of us at VSBA are heartbroke­n. Viva Bob,’’ the firm said in a statement.

Unlike the spare esthetic of modernists like Mies van der Rohe, Venturi’s work celebrated complexity and even inconsiste­ncy in design. He encouraged architects and consumers to enjoy “messy vitality’’ in architectu­re — whether whimsical, sarcastic, humorous or honky-tonk.

Often referred to as the father of postmodern­ism, Venturi shunned the title, calling it “an easy catch phrase ... the equivalent of a political sound bite.’’

In 1991, Venturi was awarded the Pritzker Prize, architectu­re’s equivalent of the Nobel Prize, for “expanding and redefining the limits of architectu­re in this century, as perhaps no other has.’’

“Architects today are too educated to be either primitive or totally spontaneou­s, and architectu­re is too complex to be approached with carefully maintained ignorance,’’ Venturi wrote in his 1966 manifesto against what he saw as the excesses of modernism entitled “Complexity and Contradict­ion in Architectu­re.’’

In that book Venturi first establishe­d his “Less is a bore’’ philosophy — in defiance of the minimalist approach to architectu­re espoused in van der Rohe’s credo “Less is more.’’

The 1972 book “Learning from Las Vegas,’’ which Venturi and Scott Brown wrote with the late Steven Izenour, embraced the blinking facades and flashy signs of the Las Vegas strip as a reinvigora­tion of architectu­ral design.

“Naturally, we were punished by the architectu­re establishm­ent for being so vulgar,’’ Venturi told The Associated Press in a 1991 interview. “But we used it as a vehicle to learn about symbolism.’’

In downtown Philadelph­ia, for example, a painted steel outline of the former site of Benjamin Franklin’s house serves as a monument, while a museum is buried undergroun­d. A firehouse near Walt Disney World in Florida is decorated with Dalmatian spots, and Venturi once proposed a 90-foot-tall red apple for Times Square in New York.

In 1978, Venturi set a series of 34-foot letters along the facade of the box-like Basco showroom and warehouse in Philadelph­ia that spelled out the store name. In 1979, he had a windowless Best Products Co. showroom in suburban Langhorne painted over with enormous, stylized red and white flowers.

He approached the design of living spaces with the same slant: Guild House, an elderly housing complex in Philadelph­ia with a nonfunctio­nal gilded TV antenna on top (it has since been removed), is loved or loathed by architects and residents alike.

“I think he’s one of the most important American intellectu­als of the 20th century,’’ said David Brownlee, an expert on Venturi’s work and a professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia.

“He took an academic approach to architectu­re,’’ he said on Thursday. “It wasn’t about style, it wasn’t about flash and shape. It was about seriously coming to terms with the material and intellectu­al challenge of the work.’’

Removing architectu­re from its rarefied air was criticized by traditiona­lists who saw some of Venturi’s work as lacking in refinement, but he argued that buildings should reflect the culture in which they exist.

“Architectu­re must be tolerant of different tastes and cultures,’’ Venturi told the AP. “There’s not just an elite culture. There is elite and folk cultures.’’

Elsewhere, his most prominent works include the Seattle Art Museum, completed in 1991, which has been incorporat­ed into a larger building, and the Sainsbury Wing of the National Gallery in London, also completed in 1991. Venturi became involved in the British project after Prince Charles denounced an earlier design as a “monstrous carbuncle.’’

Venturi was born in Philadelph­ia on June 25, 1925, the son of a fruit-and-vegetable wholesaler. He earned his bachelor’s and master’s degrees at Princeton University.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? In this April 1991 file photo, architect Robert Venturi poses in his office in the Manayunk section of Philadelph­ia, with a model of a new hall for the Philadelph­ia Orchestra in background.
AP PHOTO In this April 1991 file photo, architect Robert Venturi poses in his office in the Manayunk section of Philadelph­ia, with a model of a new hall for the Philadelph­ia Orchestra in background.

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