Enya Moore (Frame Magazine) shapes global design discourse through her UK-based reporting and academic scholarship. Her work sits at the intersection of:
Successful pitches to Moore typically include:
Avoid proposals focused solely on commercial product launches or style trends without deeper sociopolitical context.
We’ve followed Enya Moore’s work as she evolved from an academic researcher to a leading voice at Frame Magazine, where her writing bridges design theory, cultural analysis, and architectural innovation. Her career reflects a deep engagement with how physical spaces and objects influence human experience.
Moore consistently highlights designers reimagining traditional materials through sustainable practices. A 2024 piece on mycelium-based architectural composites demonstrated her interest in biomimicry solutions[1]. Pitches should emphasize technical specifications alongside cultural implications.
Her critique of Eurocentric design pedagogy in the Australasian Journal of Popular Culture reveals opportunities to pitch projects reclaiming indigenous making traditions[2]. Focus on case studies with verifiable community impact.
Rather than pure structural analysis, Moore favors narratives about how buildings shape social interactions. A recent exploration of Sydney’s queer nightlife venues exemplified this human-centered approach[3].
“The chair you sit in isn’t just an object—it’s a crystallized moment of cultural priorities, economic realities, and bodily politics.” — Enya Moore, Frame Magazine (2024)