London’s Royal Academy of Arts has announced plans for a new permanent architecture-specific gallery and the creation of two new international architecture awards as part of the RA’s mission to “garner a wider appreciation and understanding of architecture, bringing to the fore its vital relationship to culture and society.”
The new architecture space, along with a cafe, will be housed within the Dorfman Senate Rooms in Burlington Gardens, allowing the academy to show architectural exhibition year-round. The architecture rooms join wider renovation plans led by David Chipperfield Architects that will also include a new naturally-lit theater.
The two international awards, to be held on an annual basis, will consist of the Royal Academy Architecture Prize, “honouring an inspiring and enduring contribution to the culture of architecture,” and the Royal Academy Dorfman Award to identify and celebrate new talent in architecture.
Award recipients will be nominated and awarded by a jury of esteemed architects, artists, curators and critics. The inaugural Royal Academy Architecture Prize winner and the Royal Academy Dorfman Award shortlist will be announced in January 2018, with a jury chaired by architect Louisa Hutton.
The awards slate and renovation, estimated to cost £50 million ($64 million USD), will be funded in part by an undisclosed gift from the Dorfman Foundation made ahead of the Academy’s 250th anniversary next year.
“The RA is perfectly placed to lead an inclusive and vital discussion on architecture, championing quality, creativity and courage,” said Kate Goodwin, Head of Architecture & Drue Heinz Curator, Royal Academy of Arts. “Architecture is a constant presence in all our lives that is enhanced through wider engagement and vision which together with these awards, the reinvigorated Architecture Programme and our new spaces offer.”
Learn more about the project here.
News via Royal Academy of Arts.
Chipperfield Unveils Plans To Reimagine London's Royal Academy of Arts
David Chipperfield Architects have revealed plans to connect the two Grade II*-listed London bases of London's Royal Academy of Arts - the 17th century Burlington House and the 19th century 6 Burlington Gardens - as part of a £50million ($80million) masterplan of "subtle interventions."