Royal Institute of British Architects, London, 66 Portland Place
19 Lansdowne Walk
London W11 3AH
United Kingdom
The Jencks Foundation at The Cosmic House and the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA) are pleased to announce Dogma, a Brussels-based practice focused on the relationship between architecture and the city, as the 2023 recipient of the Charles Jencks Award.
Given annually, the award recognises an individual or practice who has made a major contribution to both the theory and practice of architecture.
Founded in 2002 by Pier Vittorio Aureli and Martino Tattara, Dogma’s work on large-scale urban design projects and exploration of the relationship between theory and practice continues to have a major influence on the profession, particularly among students, through both their thought processes and representation of architecture. In addition to design projects, members of Dogma engage passionately with teaching, writing and research, with Pier Vittorio Aureli and Martino Tattara teaching at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) and the Faculty of Architecture, KU Leuven, respectively.
Dogma’s “research by design” approach to exploring domestic space and its potential for transformation has resulted in studies and projects that have been exhibited internationally at the Tallinn Architectural Biennale (2014), the HKW Berlin (2015), the Biennale di Venezia (2016), the Chicago Architectural Biennial (2017), and the London Design Museum (2018).
On receiving the Award, Martino Tattara and Pier Vittorio Aureli, founders of Dogma said:
“We are truly delighted and honoured to receive this award. We are especially honoured because it is dedicated to Charles Jencks, whose practice combined history, theory and design, which are also inseparable aspects of our work. Over the last ten years, we have tried to put forward ideas to improve the way in which we live and work in our houses and in our cities, and have done this both through design proposals and by revisiting some of the most salient and often forgotten chapters of the history of our discipline. We would like to share the award with past and present collaborators without whom our work would have not been possible.”
Lily Jencks, founder of the Jencks Foundation and jury member said:
“Few architects have had a greater influence on students’ thinking and representation over the last 10 years than Dogma. While Dogma have not built many projects, all of their work takes the material construction of buildings seriously. They are an important balance to a commercially focused architectural profession, using their deep knowledge of architectural history and theory, to propose alternative ways for us to live together.
The award celebrates the multiple intelligences at play in architecture, recognising that the material products of architecture are not always building. In choosing Dogma the panel acknowledges the breadth of practices which define contemporary architecture culture.”
Edwin Heathcote, Financial Times architecture and design critic and jury member said:
“Pier Vittorio Aureli has been a hugely influential figure in education, theory and design. Politics, economics, and urban architecture combine to give a rich image of architecture as an historical continuity.
He reinforces his ideas with a drawn language which is as rigorous and instantly recognisable as his theory. His practice, Dogma, have been similarly influential, managing to embrace exhibitions, built work and books, seductive in their deceptive simplicity.”
The 2023 RIBA Charles Jencks Award selection panel consisted of RIBA President, Muyiwa Oki; Jencks Foundation Founder, Lily Jencks; Dr Adrian Lahoud, Dean of the School of Architecture at the Royal College of Art; Edwin Heathcote, Financial Times Architecture and Design Critic; Thomas Aquilina, Architect and Co-Director of New Architecture Writers; Dr Samaneh Moafi, Assistant Director of Research at Forensic Architecture and last year’s Award winner. The panel was chaired by Dr Jenny Russell, Director of Education and Learning at RIBA.
The shortlist for the 2023 Jencks Award was DAAR architects, Mathur / Da Cunha, and Dogma.
Dogma will host a lecture at RIBA, 66 Portland Place, London on Thursday, May 16, 2024. Tickets will be released and can be booked through the RIBA website starting from January 2024.