Contested Symmetries
...and other predicaments in architecture.
Preston Scott Cohen uses digital modeling techniques and lucid descriptions to challenge preconceptions in Connected Symmetries and Other Predicaments in Architecture.
176 pages; paperback
11 x 9"
Princeton Architectural Press, 2001
Preston Scott Cohen uses digital modeling techniques and lucid descriptions to challenge preconceptions in Connected Symmetries and Other Predicaments in Architecture.
176 pages; paperback
11 x 9"
Princeton Architectural Press, 2001
Price: $35.00
Preston Scott Cohen
RISD ’83 [Architecture]
Widely recognized for his groundbreaking work on the relationship between architecture and geometry, Preston Scott Cohen is a professor and director of the Master in Architecture program at Harvard University Graduate School of Design, where he earned his Masters in Architecture degree. His projects include the winning competition design for the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, the Montague House and Torus House (Progressive Architecture Award winners) and the competition proposal for the Eyebeam Museum of Art and Technology in New York. Cohen’s work has been exhibited and published internationally and is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, San Francisco MoMA, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard.
Widely recognized for his groundbreaking work on the relationship between architecture and geometry, Preston Scott Cohen is a professor and director of the Master in Architecture program at Harvard University Graduate School of Design, where he earned his Masters in Architecture degree. His projects include the winning competition design for the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, the Montague House and Torus House (Progressive Architecture Award winners) and the competition proposal for the Eyebeam Museum of Art and Technology in New York. Cohen’s work has been exhibited and published internationally and is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, San Francisco MoMA, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard.




