Architects, Great Britain Peter Cook is best known as a member of the infamous (but famously talented and farreaching) collaborative, Archigram. After studying architecture at the Bournemouth College of Art and the Architectural Association in London under Peter Smith-son, Cook worked at the office of James Cubitt and Partners in London. In the early 1960s Cook, along with Ron Herron and Michael Webb, self-published the journal Archigram. More than a critical review of architecture, the magazine served as a vehicle to exhibit their own futuristic house and urban plans through their beautiful, colorful, collaged drawing styles. The group was formalized as Archigram Architects in 1968—a partnership that lasted through 1976. The power of the Archigram group, as Cook has said, was “its creative creation of the antidote to boredom.” In 1976 Cook opened a practice with his former student Christine Hawley. Though many of their collaborative efforts remain strictly in the “project” category, C...