Lesley Lokko, Ghanaian-Scottish architect, educator, author, and curator, was selected as the recipient of the Royal Gold Medal 2024 of RIBA.

The founder of the African Futures Institute (AFI) and curator of last year’s 18th Venice Architecture Biennale received the award for her work surrounding justice causes and other attempts to “democratize” the profession. Fittingly, she joins last year’s winner Yasmeen Lari as the first-ever back-to-back solo female Royal Gold Medalists in RIBA history.
Lesley Lokko, architect, educator, and racy novelist, who shook up the Venice Biennale with a focus on the scars of postcolonial Africa, has devoted her career to amplifying under-represented voices and examining the complex relationship between architecture, identity, and race, profoundly impacting architectural education, dialogue, and discourse, especially Anglo-Saxon.

Lokko has been influential in the academic sphere through her tenure as dean of the CCNY Spitzer School of Architecture and founding director of the Graduate School of Architecture at the University of Johannesburg. Her official Gold Medal citation mentions her 2020 Annie Spink Award for Excellence in Architectural Education and other contributions to create change in the broad-reaching global "tapestry of architecture." Lokko is also the first woman of African descent to win the Gold Medal since its founding in 1848.

In 2021, Lesley Lokko founded the African Futures Institute (AFI) in Accra, Ghana, aiming to be a new model of education, research, and public dialogue that unites the arts, humanities, and sciences.

“It came as such a surprise to me. This was never on the cards. I’m delighted to be considered alongside some of the great past winners of the Royal Gold Medal. Although this is a personal award, this isn’t merely a personal triumph, this is a testament to the people and organizations I have worked with that share my goals.

I came into architecture seeking certainties, looking for answers. Instead, I found questions and possibilities, far richer, more curious, and more empathetic ways to interpret and shape the world. Architecture gave me language, in all its forms — visual, written, built, performed — and that language, in turn, has given me such hope.”
Lesley Lokko.

“A fierce champion of equity and inclusion in all aspects of life, Lesley Lokko’s progressive approach to architecture education offers hope for the future – a profession that welcomes those from all walks of life, considers the needs of our environment, and acknowledges a broad range of cultures and perspectives.

A visionary agent of change, Lesley has dedicated her life to championing these values, not only through academic endeavors but through her work as an author and curator. She remains a humble revolutionary force, with her ambition and optimism etching an indelible mark on the global architectural stage.”
RIBA President, Muyiwa Oki.

More information

Lesley Lokko. Born in Dundee, United Kingdom, in 1964, is a Ghanaian-Scottish architect, academic, and novelist. Trained at the Bartlett School of Architecture and with a PhD in Architecture from the University of London where Lokko’s knowledge base and capability as an educator was built, her academic career was initially honed at Kingston University, University of East London, London Metropolitan University, University of Greenwich, the Bartlett School of Architecture (UCL) and later at the University of Westminster. These experiences were followed by a number of visiting professorships in North-American and African higher education institutions.

Throughout her career thus far, Lokko has established a durable and international legacy in terms of her voice and the courses to which she has contributed, most notably between 2014 and 2019, as the founder and director of the Graduate School of Architecture of the University of Johannesburg, a school which – in its independence and ambition – has been transforming not just the content but the narrative of architectural education in South Africa and the continental region.

She has pioneered for, and cultivated, critical debate about identity in architecture. The innovation and passion in her teaching is matched by an unfaltering commitment to ensuring that architectural education and research run in parallel with the contemporary anthropological, artistic, technological and literary public debates. In tandem with this approach, she questions, defines and enhances the role the architect plays in shaping contemporary global and local communities. This professional stance not only makes her a most deserving winner of this award but also confirms that we are to expect many forms of achievement and of well-deserved recognition in her future career steps.
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Published on: January 19, 2024
Cite: "Lesley Lokko wins Royal Gold Medal 2024 RIBA " METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/lesley-lokko-wins-royal-gold-medal-2024-riba> ISSN 1139-6415
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