The Architecture Drawing Prize winners have been selected, naming with the Grand Prize and winner in the Hybrid Images section to Jerome Xin Hao Ng with Moment Mori: Peckham Hospice Care Home. The other two winners of the Digital and Hand Drawn categories, have been respectively, Christopher Wijatno with Deepwater Purgatory and Dimitrios Grozopoulis with Scenarios for a Post-Crisis Landscape.

It will be at the World Architecture Festival from November 15th to 17th, where the winners of the three categories along with another 35 selected participants will exhibit their works and the winners will also present them. The winner of the general award Jerome Xin Hao Ng, will receive a prize at a Gala Dinner that will close the festival. But not only will the works be exhibited in this festival, from February 21st to April 14th of 2018, the winning and selected works will be exhibited at the Sir John Soane Museum in London.

Momento Mori: a Peckham Hospice Care Home by Jerome Xin Hao Ng is the winner of the inaugural Architecture Drawing Prize curated by Make Architects, Sir John Soane’s Museum and the World Architecture Festival.
 
Jeremy Melvin, Curator of World Architecture Festival (WAF), heralded the drawing as “a superbly conceived and executed perspectival view looking down through the building from roof level, praised for its technical skill and the sensitivity with which it depicted the spaces found in such institutions as settings for multi-generation social interaction”. It was produced as part of Ng’s final diploma project at The Bartlett School of Architecture, University College London.
 
As winner of the category for Hybrid images, Ng’s drawing was selected for the top prize over the winners of the other two categories: Christopher Wijatno’s Deepwater Purgatory in the Digital category; Dimitrios Grozopoulis’ Scenarios for a Post-Crisis Landscape from the Hand-drawn category.
 
Wijatno depicted a prison moored like an oil rig in deep water, which judges felt evoked Piranesi and Dante. Grozopoulis’ drawing was commended by judges as having a haunting quality beyond that of most images of post-industrial landscapes, portrayed with an extraordinary control of line.

The Architecture Drawing Prize was judged by artists Ben Langlands and Nikki Bell; Narinder Singh Sagoo, Head of Design Communication at Foster and Partners; Ken Shuttleworth of Make Architects; Owen Hopkins of the Sir John Soane’s Museum; and Jeremy Melvin of the World Architecture Festival.
 
Ken Shuttleworth, Founder of Make, said: “Drawing has always been a passion of mine, I imagine it is for most architects. So few drawings are realised as actual buildings, but this is a chance to celebrate the drawing as its own creation, its own piece of art. We hope that this shortlist will provide an exciting snapshot of creative thinking and excellence in drawing from around the world.”
 
Owen Hopkins commented: “In the end three drawings emerged which we felt demonstrated a perfect unity of subject, technique and media - and these were our winners. The competition has shown that the art of architectural drawing is well and truly alive.”
 
Judges Ben Langlands and Nikki Bell added: “A great drawing is the first step from beauty to immortality. The importance of drawing can't be exaggerated because it evidences aesthetic and conceptual perception at the most fundamental level.”
 
The Architecture Drawing Prize received 166 entries across the three categories. In addition to the winners the judges gave two commendations and selected another six for display in the digital category. The judges also awarded five commendations and picked a further six of the hand-drawn entries to shortlist for display at WAF, and in the hybrid category made three commendations with another seven shortlisted entries chosen for display at WAF.
 
The shortlist extends to 38 accomplished entries from architects, designers and students hailing from 15 different countries around the globe. Sixty percent of the shortlisted entries were submitted by entrants aged 30 and under.

These shortlisted entries will be displayed at the Architecture Drawing Prize stand at the World Architecture Festival which takes place in Berlin from 15-17 November 2018. All winning and commended entrants have been awarded a delegate pass to attend the event. There will be presentations for the category winners and exhibits of the shortlisted and winning drawings on the stand. The overall winner, Jerome Xin Hao Ng, will receive an award at the prestigious Gala Dinner, which closes the Festival on the evening of November 17th.
 
The winning and shortlisted entries will then be exhibited at Sir John Soane’s Museum in London from 21 February – 14 April 2018.
 
The Architecture Drawing prize was created in recognition of the continuing importance of hand drawing, whilst also embracing the creative use of digitally produced renderings. Submissions have been evaluated on the basis of their technical skill, originality in approach and ability to convey an architectural idea, whether for a conceptual or actual building project.
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Architecture Drawing Prize.- Make Architects, Sir John Soane’s Museum, the World Architecture Festival. World Architecture Festival.- Jeremy Melvin
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World Architecture Festival, Berlin, Germany
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Dates Fechas
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November 15th to 17th, 2017
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Published on: October 26, 2017
Cite: "Announcement of the winner of The Architecture Drawing Prize 2017" METALOCUS. Accessed
<https://www.metalocus.es/en/news/announcement-winner-architecture-drawing-prize-2017> ISSN 1139-6415
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