Here is the latest I can share based on available sources:
- Denise Scott Brown remains a prominent figure in architecture, with ongoing coverage around her career, advocacy, and postmodernist contributions. Recent discussions highlight her role in the broader conversation about recognition for women in architecture.[1][2][3]
- Notable related developments include awards and honors connected to her influence, as well as ongoing public discourse about projects associated with her and Robert Venturi, including debates over retrospectives and recognition of joint work.[3][1]
- For deeper, up-to-the-minute updates, I can monitor current outlets and pull the freshest articles if you’d like.
Would you like me to pull the latest pieces from architectural press and major news outlets and summarize them with links? If you have a preferred region or publication, I can tailor the search.
Sources
Discover the latest Architecture news and projects on Denise Scott Brown at ArchDaily, the world's largest architecture website. Stay up-to-date with articles and updates on the newest developments in architecture.
www.archdaily.comDenise Scott Brown receives the Vilcek Prize in Architecture for integrating ideas of pluralism and multiculturalism, social justice, and contemporary influences into the field of architecture.
vilcek.orgAn interview of Denise Scott Brown conducted 1990 October 25-1991 November 9, by Peter Reed, for the Archives of American Art.
www.aaa.si.eduAn exhibition has opened at New York’s Carriage Trade Gallery celebrating the photography of Denise Scott Brown, highlighting the significance of pop art.
www.archdaily.comThe latest Denise Scott Brown architecture and design news, including interviews and the Queen Anne Side Chair
www.dezeen.comBorn in Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia), Scott Brown (née Lakofski) studied architecture at the University of Witwatersrand in Johannesburg from 1948 to 1952, and earned a diploma from the Architectural Association in London in 1955. She married architect Robert Scott Brown, and the couple studied urban planning at the University of Pennsylvania, where, after graduation and her husband’s untimely death, she taught planning and also earned her M.Arch in 1965. In 1967 she married architect Robert...
www.tclf.orgAmerican, born Zambia, 1931
www.moma.org