No Pritzker for Denise Scott Brown—AgainIn one of the less proud moments in architecture, the Pritzker committee awarded a deserving Robert Venturi their prize—one of the profession's highest honors—in 1991 but failed to recognize an equally deserving Denise Scott Brown, who co-authored the seminal tome Learning from Las Vegas and worked alongside Venturi. Students at Harvard created a petition on change.org to convince the jury to retroactively acknowledge her work. But again, they did not. More on the story here.  Search “denise korn” from Architecture and Design: 2013 Year In Review

Search “denise korn”

No Pritzker for Denise Scott Brown—AgainIn one of the less proud moments in architecture, the Pritzker committee awarded a deserving Robert Venturi their prize—one of the profession's highest honors—in 1991 but failed to recognize an equally deserving Denise Scott Brown, who co-authored the seminal tome Learning from Las Vegas and worked alongside Venturi. Students at Harvard created a petition on change.org to convince the jury to retroactively acknowledge her work. But again, they did not. More on the story here.