Canada Council announces Prix de Rome and J.B.C. Watkins Award winners
The Canada Council for the Arts is recognizing the potential of emerging architects and the contribution of practicing architects by awarding the following four prizes.
The Canada Council contributes to the creative and diverse arts and literary scene, and supports their presence across Canada and around the world.
The winners include the following:
Prix de Rome in Architecture — Professional
The Prix de Rome in Architecture – Professional is awarded to a young practitioner of architecture or an architectural firm that has completed their first built works and has demonstrated exceptional artistic potential. With this prize, the recipient may travel abroad to develop their skills and their creative practice, and to strengthen their position in the international architecture world.
D’Arcy Jones ArchitectsPhoto: Shane Hauser
This year’s winner is D’Arcy Jones Architects. D’Arcy Jones is the principal of D’Arcy Jones Architects, a Vancouver practice recognized for design excellence. DJA’s responses to contemporary conditions have earned awards and publications nationally and internationally. Their work focuses on arts, residential and commercial projects. Previous practice honours include an Architectural Institute of British Columbia Emerging Firm Award, a Royal Architectural Institute of Canada Emerging Architectural Practice Award and the Ronald J. Thom Award for Early Design Achievement from the Canada Council for the Arts.
Ronald J. Thom Award for Early Design Achievement
The Ronald J. Thom Award for Early Design Achievement is given to a practitioner of architecture or an architectural firm. The successful candidate must be in the early stages of a career or practice and must demonstrate both outstanding creative talent and exceptional potential in architectural design.
Odami. Photo: Arash Moallemi
The latest winner, Odami, is an award-winning architecture and design studio that aims to “converge the pragmatic and the expressive, the subtle and the striking, the familiar and the unexpected.”
Led by Arancha González Bernardo, a Spanish architect and Michael Fohring, a Canadian designer, the practice represents a merging of design values and histories, a process deepened by the contemporary multiculturalism of the city in which Odami lives and works. In embracing difference and purposely working between modes, perspectives and dichotomies, they’re in search of a fertile meeting ground—a space of conference and connection that gives rise to inventive outcomes.
Prix de Rome in Architecture — Emerging Practitioners
Daniel Wong. Photo: Kabir Olatinwo
The Prix de Rome in Architecture – Emerging Practitioners is awarded to a recent graduate from a Canadian architectural school who demonstrates exceptional potential in architectural design. With this prize, the recipient may visit architectural buildings and carry out an internship at an international architectural firm.
The latest winner, Daniel Wong, is currently an intern architect at AAmp Studio, in Toronto. He holds a Bachelor of Architectural Science from the British Columbia Institute of Technologyand a Master of Architecture from the University of Toronto. During his studies, he received several awards including the Barry W. Sampson Scholarship and the John and Myrna Daniels Foundation Opportunity Award. He also received the Kuwabara-Jackman Architecture Thesis Gold Medal for his research on architectural maintenance as a sustainable alternative for the built environment.
J.B.C. Watkins Award: Architecture
Fabio Lima. Photo: Yixin Cao
The J.B.C. Watkins Fellowship: Architecture is offered to an individual who has completed a bachelor’s or master’s degree in architecture in Canada and who will pursue postgraduate studies in another country, ideally Denmark, Norway, Sweden or Iceland.
The latest winner, Fabio Lima is a graduate student and research fellow at Pratt Institute, in New York City, USA. His work explores the social archaeology of queer spaces by mobilizing the tools of historic preservation. Lima studied architecture at the Université de Montréal, in Quebec, and his work has been supported by the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada and the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.
The post Canada Council announces Prix de Rome and J.B.C. Watkins Award winners appeared first on Canadian Architect.
#canada #council #announces #prix #rome
Canada Council announces Prix de Rome and J.B.C. Watkins Award winners
The Canada Council for the Arts is recognizing the potential of emerging architects and the contribution of practicing architects by awarding the following four prizes.
The Canada Council contributes to the creative and diverse arts and literary scene, and supports their presence across Canada and around the world.
The winners include the following:
Prix de Rome in Architecture — Professional
The Prix de Rome in Architecture – Professional is awarded to a young practitioner of architecture or an architectural firm that has completed their first built works and has demonstrated exceptional artistic potential. With this prize, the recipient may travel abroad to develop their skills and their creative practice, and to strengthen their position in the international architecture world.
D’Arcy Jones ArchitectsPhoto: Shane Hauser
This year’s winner is D’Arcy Jones Architects. D’Arcy Jones is the principal of D’Arcy Jones Architects, a Vancouver practice recognized for design excellence. DJA’s responses to contemporary conditions have earned awards and publications nationally and internationally. Their work focuses on arts, residential and commercial projects. Previous practice honours include an Architectural Institute of British Columbia Emerging Firm Award, a Royal Architectural Institute of Canada Emerging Architectural Practice Award and the Ronald J. Thom Award for Early Design Achievement from the Canada Council for the Arts.
Ronald J. Thom Award for Early Design Achievement
The Ronald J. Thom Award for Early Design Achievement is given to a practitioner of architecture or an architectural firm. The successful candidate must be in the early stages of a career or practice and must demonstrate both outstanding creative talent and exceptional potential in architectural design.
Odami. Photo: Arash Moallemi
The latest winner, Odami, is an award-winning architecture and design studio that aims to “converge the pragmatic and the expressive, the subtle and the striking, the familiar and the unexpected.”
Led by Arancha González Bernardo, a Spanish architect and Michael Fohring, a Canadian designer, the practice represents a merging of design values and histories, a process deepened by the contemporary multiculturalism of the city in which Odami lives and works. In embracing difference and purposely working between modes, perspectives and dichotomies, they’re in search of a fertile meeting ground—a space of conference and connection that gives rise to inventive outcomes.
Prix de Rome in Architecture — Emerging Practitioners
Daniel Wong. Photo: Kabir Olatinwo
The Prix de Rome in Architecture – Emerging Practitioners is awarded to a recent graduate from a Canadian architectural school who demonstrates exceptional potential in architectural design. With this prize, the recipient may visit architectural buildings and carry out an internship at an international architectural firm.
The latest winner, Daniel Wong, is currently an intern architect at AAmp Studio, in Toronto. He holds a Bachelor of Architectural Science from the British Columbia Institute of Technologyand a Master of Architecture from the University of Toronto. During his studies, he received several awards including the Barry W. Sampson Scholarship and the John and Myrna Daniels Foundation Opportunity Award. He also received the Kuwabara-Jackman Architecture Thesis Gold Medal for his research on architectural maintenance as a sustainable alternative for the built environment.
J.B.C. Watkins Award: Architecture
Fabio Lima. Photo: Yixin Cao
The J.B.C. Watkins Fellowship: Architecture is offered to an individual who has completed a bachelor’s or master’s degree in architecture in Canada and who will pursue postgraduate studies in another country, ideally Denmark, Norway, Sweden or Iceland.
The latest winner, Fabio Lima is a graduate student and research fellow at Pratt Institute, in New York City, USA. His work explores the social archaeology of queer spaces by mobilizing the tools of historic preservation. Lima studied architecture at the Université de Montréal, in Quebec, and his work has been supported by the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada and the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.
The post Canada Council announces Prix de Rome and J.B.C. Watkins Award winners appeared first on Canadian Architect.
#canada #council #announces #prix #rome