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By Denise Scott Brown

Publisher: Lars Müller Publishers
Publication date: August 2025
Print length: 434 pages
Language: English
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Encounters: Denise Scott Brown Photographs presents a long-overdue exploration of the photographic vision of one of the most influential postwar architects. For Denise Scott Brown, photography has been both a personal practice and a professional tool, enabling her to engage with the urban and social landscapes that would inform her architectural thinking. Capturing the ephemeral, the ordinary, and the overlooked, she used her camera to observe, analyze, and interpret the world around her, turning fleeting moments into enduring insights.

Spanning the 1950s to the 1970s, the photographs collected in Encounters reflect Scott Brown’s journey from her childhood in Johannesburg to her studies in London, extensive travels across Europe, and eventual relocation to the United States. Along the way, she documented streets, buildings, urban signage, and public spaces, recording both the formal and informal elements that reveal the complex interactions of people, place, and culture. These images also capture the development of her relationship with Robert Venturi and the intellectual currents that would culminate in the seminal work Learning from Las Vegas.

Rather than presenting her photographs in strict chronological order, the book moves thematically, allowing readers to perceive the depth of Scott Brown’s observational practice. Her work demonstrates how photography can serve as an analytical tool for architecture and urbanism, offering perspectives that inform design, planning, and critical thinking. Each image is a study in composition, context, and the interplay between built and lived environments, emphasizing the architect’s responsibility to read and intervene thoughtfully within the world.

Encounters is not only a celebration of Scott Brown’s eye for the everyday and the extraordinary but also a testament to the integration of seeing and thinking in design practice. Through these photographs, the book illuminates the foundational visual intelligence that underpins her architectural achievements, inviting readers to engage with architecture as a lived, observed, and deeply human discipline.

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