Iconography and Electronics Upon a Generic Architecture A View from the Drafting Room
“Iconography and Electronics Upon a Generic Architecture: A View from the Drafting Room” by Robert Venturi is a new edition published by MIT Press on February 6, 1998. This 374-page collection presents a range of writings that explore the intersection of architecture, iconography, and electronics. Venturi, known for his influential works such as “Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture” and “Learning from Las Vegas,” offers insights into a generic architecture that emphasizes both shelter and symbolism.
Readers will find a diverse array of essays, letters, reports, and manifestos that reflect Venturi’s candid perspective on architectural practice. The writings address the complexities of modern architecture and critique its conceptualization, often with humor and personal anecdotes. This edition includes Venturi’s 1950 M.F.A. thesis, marking its first publication, alongside coauthored essays with Denise Scott Brown. The collection engages with themes of representation and reference in the context of contemporary architecture, drawing connections to historical influences and the evolving role of symbolism in design.
Official synopsis Publisher
“Robert Venturi’s ‘Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture’ and ‘Learning from Las Vegas’ (the latter coauthored with Denise Scott Brown and Steven Izenour) are among the most influential books by any architect of our era – the one celebrating complexity in architecture, the other the uses of symbolism in commercial and vernacular architecture and signage. This new collection of writings in a variety of genres argues for a generic architecture defined by iconography and electronics, an architecture whose elemental qualities become shelter and symbol. Venturi, who along with his partner, Denise Scott Brown, made the vulgar acceptable and found virtue in the commercial, the kitsch, and the ordinary, is respected equally as a theorist and an architect who communicates his architectural ideas, formal and verbal, with grace and wit. These essays, letters, reports, lectures, manifestos, and polemical texts offer a candid, uncensored view from the drafting room, commonsense responses, urgent and diverse, of a busy architect, in part a reaction against the conceptualizing of architecture today invaded by other disciplines and made obscure. Seven of the essays were coauthored with Denise Scott Brown. The voice is personal, eloquent in expounding on the unglamorous side of practice; sometimes vituperative and corrective in addressing clients, theoreticians, and critics; often amusing and humorous in looking back on past projects and opportunities; instructive in describing early influences and tasts; and reflective in assessing his own impact on the profession. The lead essays can be described as an argument embracing reference and representation in our information age, whose technical basis is truly of our time and whose iconographic basis derives from a long tradition in architecture including hieroglyphic Egyptian pylons, early Christian basilicas, scenographic Baroque interiors, and even eclectic Romantic architecture and twentieth-century electronic signs and displays. The essays include Venturi’s 1950 M.F.A. thesis, published here for the first time – a work that foreshadows many of the themes that were later to make him a controversial and ground-breaking architect and writer – and a series of vintage Venturi aphorisms”–Back cover.
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