Environmental Fable Set in Sci-Fi Landscapes Wins 2017 Fairy Tales Competition
Yesterday evening, in a ceremony at the National Building Museum in Washington DC, Blank Space announced the winners of their annual Fairy Tales competition. Representing the best the architectural imagination has to offer were 4 winners and 10 honorable mentions, selected by a jury of high-profile judges including Dan Wood, Michel Rojkind, Marion Weiss, and Stefano Boeri, among many more.
1st Prize: Mykhailo Ponomarenko for ?Last Day?. Image Courtesy of Blank Space
Yesterday evening, in a ceremony at the National Building Museum in Washington DC, Blank Space announced the winners of their annual Fairy Tales competition. Representing the best the architectural imagination has to offer were 4 winners and 10 honorable mentions, selected by a jury of high-profile judges including Dan Wood, Michel Rojkind, Marion Weiss, and Stefano Boeri, among many more.?The winning entries in this year?s competition include oblique references to current events, mundane daily activities and human emotions that we all easily relate to?they make visible how we shape space, and in turn, how space shapes us,? said Executive Director of the National Building Museum and jury member Chase W Rynd. ?The images and narratives are so wildly outlandish, and yet, so grounded that it seems like we could mistakenly stumble into any of them.?The winning entry this year went to Mykhailo Ponomarenko, a Ukrainian architect whose sci-fi landscapes and painterly presentation provide the backdro...
1st Prize: Mykhailo Ponomarenko for ?Last Day?. Image Courtesy of Blank Space
Yesterday evening, in a ceremony at the National Building Museum in Washington DC, Blank Space announced the winners of their annual Fairy Tales competition. Representing the best the architectural imagination has to offer were 4 winners and 10 honorable mentions, selected by a jury of high-profile judges including Dan Wood, Michel Rojkind, Marion Weiss, and Stefano Boeri, among many more.?The winning entries in this year?s competition include oblique references to current events, mundane daily activities and human emotions that we all easily relate to?they make visible how we shape space, and in turn, how space shapes us,? said Executive Director of the National Building Museum and jury member Chase W Rynd. ?The images and narratives are so wildly outlandish, and yet, so grounded that it seems like we could mistakenly stumble into any of them.?The winning entry this year went to Mykhailo Ponomarenko, a Ukrainian architect whose sci-fi landscapes and painterly presentation provide the backdro...
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