It's time to let Archinect readers judge the graphic prowess of architecture schools again as they have showcased their lecture and public events programming in our ongoing Get Lectured series.
As we prepare for the upcoming Fall term, which Fall 2022 and Spring 2023 lecture poster will win the top spot for our latest popularity vote?
In our last poll, Boston Architectural College's Spring 2021 poster took home the first prize, followed by the University of Toronto's Winter/Spring poster winning second place, and Woodbury University taking the third and fourth spots for their Spring and Fall poster submissions.
Check out the posters we've presented throughout the Fall '22 and Spring '23 terms, and vote for your favorites here.
Voting closes on Monday, August 28, at 5:30 p.m. Pacific Time. The lecture posters with the most votes will be announced on Friday, September 1. Have fun!
Want to share your school's latest lecture series and be included in the Fall 2023 series? Send us your poster design and event details.
6 Comments
Do we vote on the potential content interest as a student/attendee or graphic design?
On a technical/subjective aesthetic note:
Why do all the colours look a bit like they've been done by someone with colour blindness? Maybe conversion from CMYK but RGB workflows have been standard in print for a while now. I'm biased as I like things to look a bit more vibrant but they're all very similar.
This contest is purely about the graphic design of the posters and the overall look & feel.
Also you can't click on them to see them bigger, which is kind of important to give an opinion on posters, even if you're looking at it on the internet. Intended reproduction size would have also been useful as some will work better than others depending on where they're displayed.
To see the high-resolution versions of the posters and full event details, please revisit the Fall '22 (https://archinect.com/news/tag/2065151/fall-2022-lectures) and Spring '23 (https://archinect.com/news/tag/2155914/spring-2023-lectures) terms in our previous Archinect coverage.
What size are they printed at?
I'm asking what size they're going to be printed at because if looking at them on a computer (which is necessary for a digital vote) you won't be able to judge them accurately; are they on a pin board in the respective architectural/uni faculties for instance? Some will be far better received than others in that environment, the ones that are animated - how does that work?
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