| Herbert Adler* |
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Adler was the Managing Principal of Halcyon/Alan B. Slifka Management Company LLC. He served on the board of overseers at the architecture school at the University of Pennsylvania and was a client and friend of Venturi and Scott Brown. |
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| Noah Carter |
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Carter worked for VSBA while completing his graduate degree in architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. A former Senior Strategy Executive at Microsoft and Partner of Creative Technologies, he is now a practicing architect in Southampton, New York. |
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| Walter Chatham |
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Chatham is the founding principal of Walter Chatham Architect, a purposely small, but internationally renowned, New York-based design firm. |
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| Hugh Davies |
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Davies has been The David C. Copley Director of the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego since 1983 and has served as curator or co-curator for numerous exhibitions. Also, he has been a member of the Association of Art Museum Directors for over 20 years, assuming the role of President from 1997-1998. |
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| Joseph Dorman |
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Dorman is an independent producer, director and writer. His critically acclaimed documentary, Arguing the World, chronicals the history of the New York Intellectuals. This film has served as a model for Learning from Bob and Denise. |
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| Wendy Evans Joseph |
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Joseph is the president of Wendy Evans Joseph Architecture, a firm she founded in 1996 whose projects include the award winning Women's Museum in Dallas. Prior to this she was a senior associate at Pei, Cobb Freed & Partners. She is the President of the Architecture League of New York. |
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| Ronald Evitts |
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Evitts established Ronald Evitts Architects in 2000, after working for Venturi, Scott Brown and Associates for eleven years, including as director of its New York City office for the Whitehall Ferry Terminal project. |
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| Martin Filler |
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Martin Filler, architecture critic of House & Garden, has been a contributor to The New York Review of Books for over twenty years, and has written more than a dozen articles on Venturi and Scott Brown. |
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| Nathan Glazer |

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Glazer is Professor of Education and Social Structure, Emeritus at Harvard University and one of the world's preeminent social theorists. From the beginning, he championed theories that did not fit comfortably into an ideological structure. |
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| Paul Goldberger |
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Paul Goldberger, one of the nation’s most recognized writers in the field of architecture, design and urbanism, has been the architecture critic for The New Yorker since 1997. Prior to this he was the architecture critic for The New York Times for 25 years. |
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| Agnes Gund |
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Agnes Gund is the President Emerita of The Museum of Modern Art, the Chairman of the Mayor’s Cultural Affairs Advisory Commission, NY and member of the boards of numerous arts organizations. As a patron of architecture and the arts, collector and philanthropist she continues to significantly influence the direction of the arts in America. |
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| Laurie Hawkinson |
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A partner in the internationally recognized design firm Smith-Miller + Hawkinson Architect, Hawkinson is a professor at Columbia University where she has taught studios examining today's Las Vegas. In the early 1980s she worked on Venturi and Rauch's Westway project. |
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| Dave Hickey |
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Hickey is a freelance writer of fiction and cultural criticism. He has written for most major American cultural publications including The New York Times. A former Executive Editor of Art in America Magazine, he is currently Professor of Art Theory and Criticism at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. |
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| Elise Jaffe + Jeffrey Brown |
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Elise Jaffe and Jeffrey Brown are a team who personally exemplify the values of Venturi and Scott Brown. They are lovers of architecture, entrepreneurs, and embracers of life long learning. |
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| Nathaniel Kahn |
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The son of architect Louis I. Kahn and landscape architect Harriet Pattison, and the godson of Robert Venturi, Kahn’s earliest memories are embroiled in the world of Philadelphia architects. He is an award winning documentary film producer. |
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| James Parks Morton |
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President of the Interfaith Center of New York, Morton received his degree in architecture from Harvard College in 1950. He went on to serve for 25 years as Dean of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine where he was a leading advocate of an ecumenical approach to religion. |
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| Jonathan Oakes |
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Oakes is the co-founder of Open Network Television, LLC, a media publishing firm focused on digital video distribution. He is currently enrolled at Harvard Business School. Previously, he was a senior director for corporate strategy at Palm, Inc. |
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| Andrew Reyniak |
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An up and coming young architect, Reyniak is a senior project manager at Tsao and McKown Architects. Prior to this he was a partner in the award-winning design firm B&R projects. |
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| Frederic Schwartz |
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Schwartz is the principal of Frederic Schwartz Architects, an award-winning design firm. In the early 1980s, he was the director of Venturi, Rauch and Scott Brown's New York office managing the Westway project. |
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| Vincent Scully |
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Scully is the Sterling Professor Emeritus of the History of Art at Yale University in New Haven, CT and Visiting Professor at the University of Miami. According to Robert Venturi, Scully's introduction to Complexity and Contradiction was vital to the book’s success. |
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| Henry Smith-Miller |
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A partner in the internationally recognized design firm Smith-Miller + Hawkinson Architect, Smith-Miller grew up in architecture as the son of two architects who emigrated from Chile. |