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Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

United States Architecture News - Apr 10, 2019 - 00:29   12914 views

Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

Blank Space has announced the winners for its sixth annual Fairy Tales 2019 competition. With submissions from over 65 countries, the award-winning entries explore current events and the creative process through wonderfully crafted short stories and artwork.

The winners were chosen by a jury of more than 20 leading architects, designers and storytellers, including Moshe Safdie, Tatiana Bilbao, Jurgen Mayer, Julia Koerner, Mark Foster Gageand Jane Yolen, among many other distinguished judges. 

Francesca Giuliani, a co-founder of Blank Space, said: "This year’s winners utilize the power of narrative to explore complex issues like immigration, pollution, climate change, sea level rise, and the longevity of human impact. Time and time again, the Fairy Tales competition attracts creatives with a desire to inspire meaningful change in the world, through thought provoking and artistic submission that wrestle with the most urgent, real issues of our time."

Since its inception in 2013, the annual Fairy Tales challenge has attracted thousands of participants, and winners have gone on to develop their stories into successful Kickstarter campaigns, short films, comic books, and exhibitions. This year’s jury selected three prize winners and 13 honorable mentions.

The Jury awarded 9 Honorable Mentions to: Constantinos Marcou; Carl Ydergård; Xiaoyin Xie; Jono Bentley Sturt; Michael Leckie, Ryan Nelson, and Jason Hall; Anna Kuchera; Albert Orozco; Bojana Papic and Yann Junod; Ahad Almeida Sheikh; Erik Bean; Haley Koesters, Natalia O’Neill Vega, and Daria Piekos; Sungmin Kim, Junghun Park, and Hoyoung Roh; and Claudia Wainer.

Scroll down to see the three winners with short info below:

Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

Image © Lorena Cano Acosta and Nicolás Mendoza Ramos

Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

Image © Lorena Cano Acosta and Nicolás Mendoza Ramos

Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

Image © Lorena Cano Acosta and Nicolás Mendoza Ramos

1st prize: Lorena Cano Acosta and Nicolás Mendoza Ramos for "The Fall"

Lorena and Nicolas are both Colombian architects, based in Bogotá. Nicolas has spent the last 2 years exploring the frontiers of architecture and storytelling in the entertainment industry, where he has worked as an environment artist on video game projects for both national and international companies. Lorena is also a designer passionate about emotional and critical design, with experience on editorial projects that deconstruct complex narratives into digestible, stunning visual pieces. They strongly believe that architecture should not be limited to shape buildings, but also used as a stage for ideas and concerns. 

"The Fall" was inspired by the mass exodus that people from Venezuela have been struggling for a while now, and how architecture and urbanism are not responding to this social problem. This is not an isolated issue- as it has been happening around the globe, boosting the belief that borders should be closed. We have normalized this matter and we have become more intolerant about the circumstances in which immigrants are subsisting," said Lorena Cano Acosta and Nicolás Mendoza Ramos.

"We have reached the point where we make invisible those who are in a different situation from ours. This tale portrays the story of a homeless woman who falls into a world that has forgotten its past and shows how media have misrepresented sensible subjects like environmental issues and migrations. The narrative challenges the reader to have a critical view of how our actions affect the world we are living in, reflecting human condition and evoking emotional impact." 

Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

Image © Nick Stath

Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

Image © Nick Stath

Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

Image © Nick Stath

2nd prize: Nick Stath, for his story "Monuments of the Past"

Nick is a concept artist, designer and illustrator based in Melbourne, Australia. Upon receiving his Masters in architecture from RMIT University, he has pursued working simultaneously as a designer in both Architectural Practice and the Entertainment Industry. His passion lies in creating visual stories of science-fiction that depict the relationship between the built and natural environment. His work is the continuous exploration of  space, scale, composition and atmosphere, intending to evoke emotion that allows the viewers’ imagination to traverse.

"My story was inspired by climate change and how we currently take the beauty of our planet for granted. My desire was to represent this issue through a story that makes us wonder what life could be like in a future where mother nature and her resources have diminished before our eyes," said Nick Stath.

"A world where parents have to tell their children stories of what forests, mountains and grass fields where once like. My vision for this future environment was a series of over-scaled structures that hoist man made landscapes into the sky. These structures represent the monuments of our past."

Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

Image © Anthony D’Auria

Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

Image © Anthony D’Auria

Fairy Tales 2019 Winners Explore Immigration, Sustainability and the Future with poetic projects

Image © Anthony D’Auria

3rd prize: Anthony D’Auria for "Kraken in an 80 Million Gallon Tank"

Anthony is a designer of dubious repute from Portland, OR. He studied architecture at the University of Edinburgh and the Bartlett School of Architecture and he has worked throughout the US and in the UK on various projects that have, at times, become startlingly architectural. He is interested in the relationship between the stories people tell, the things people make and the way that the two often intertwine to reflect each other. He currently lives in Brooklyn, NY where he hopes to make it big someday. 

"Kraken in an 80 Million Gallon Tank” was written on a cell phone, on a commuter ferry shrouded in mist over a period of 4 work weeks. Beyond simply being an exercise in listing synonyms for fog, the tale imagines an uncanny future that is humid and sticky - a future where things have been set in motion and no matter how big we build or how intricately we plan, they cannot be undone," said Anthony D’Auria. 

"How do we make sense of such a future? How do we live on the tenuous ground that past decisions have engendered? In the end, it all seems pretty hazy."

The winning stories and Honorable Mentions can be read in full on Blank Space’s website

> via Blank Space