Rendered Futures: Drawing Structure, an exhibition of architectural drawings, staged by Auckland craft and design gallery Objectspace, was well timed and thought scary. Opportune, as a result of, on this winter of generalised discontent, it confirmed some like to a career battling the implications for the development business of a recession that, for older architects, has surfaced (dangerous) reminiscences of the early Nineteen Nineties. And on level, too, in view of latest considerations concerning the implications of AI for design apply and careers, a disquiet fed by the accelerating tempo of technological improvement and the untrammelled ambition of AI firms. Dystopian predictions of human marginalisation abound. Are we heedlessly heading in direction of the purpose of no return? A chilling second, maybe, like that cinematically previewed almost 40 years in the past within the scene from 2001: A House Odyssey the place space-walking crewman Dave orders robotic HAL to open the rescue pod doorways for him: “I’m sorry, Dave. I can’t do that.”
The consciousness of AI and trepidation about AI consciousness are actually so pervasive that Rendered Futures, regardless of its forwardfocused title, may need been locked right into a backward-looking gaze. An exhibition that gathered greater than 70 works from the final 50 years — the oldest being David Mitchell’s 1975 pencil and pastel drawings for a home close to Auckland — was intrinsically retrospective, and will simply have been forged as a valediction: RIP the architectural sketch, that historic artefact of human company.
However curators Kim Paton, of Objectspace, and Micheal McCabe, of AUT, offered a unique and extra complicated account of the transition in structure from analog to digital design. Their exhibition — credit score must also go to researcher Lucy Treep and catalogue editor Victoria McAdam — means that, as tends to be the norm with technological development, change within the area of architectural drawing has been, up to now, a matter of and-and somewhat than eitheror. Thirty years after Andrew Barrie’s experiments with first-generation 3D wiremodelling software program, Pete Bossley and Nat Cheshire are hand sketching on tablets, David Hockney-style, and Dajiang Tai is portray watercolours that set up the atmospheric settings for the design of hospitality interiors.
Rendered Futures was a very good present to stroll round. As common, Stephen Brookbanks’ vitrines had been display-worthy objects in themselves, though the exhibition’s object-numbering system did take some deciphering. Whereas the architectural group was the core viewers, there have been, per Objectspace’s outreach intention, many entry factors for ‘lay’ guests. (A advantage of a survey present is that, likelihood is, there’ll be one thing for everybody.) Rendered Futures was understandably Auckland-centric however its span was vast and prolonged into the blurry borderland between structure and artwork. Displays from crossover territory included Russell Lowe’s 1995 pupil drawing, referencing the fantastical paper structure of Jean-Jacques Lequeu (1757–1826), and Raukura Turei’s drawn response to a 2010 revivalist staging of a Whare Tapere theatrical efficiency. From one other architectural frontier got here the pressing pragmatism of a drawing for a composting rest room despatched earlier this yr by Hatch Workshop (Hannah Broatch and Mason Rattray) to Palestinian farm staff.
Individuals admire freehand drawing expertise and, most likely, nonetheless count on architects to have them. That being the case, the exhibited sketch books of Pip Cheshire, Richard Harris and John Coop couldn’t have didn’t impress, and drawings by Icao Tiseli — illustrations marrying structure with oceanic and celestial cartography — would solely have served to please. Modern know-how additionally has standard enchantment and maybe the cutest of the Rendered Futures reveals had been the tablet-and-3D-glasses variations of the ‘cyberphysical’ holographic installations, created by Uwe Rieger and Yinan Liu on the College of Auckland’s arc/sec Lab.
Rendered Futures was additionally a very good present to consider. Ponderable matters embrace what is perhaps known as the ontological standing, in 2025, of the architectural drawing. How far does the time period stretch and, nevertheless drawing is outlined, what is perhaps its destiny within the impending age of Autonomous Programs? Will minds quickly meld with machines in a hands-free artistic course of? (Ninety years on, Walter Benjamin’s well-known essay, ‘The Work of Artwork within the Age of Mechanical Copy’, has extra resonance than ever.) Within the meantime, one message of Rendered Futures is that, whereas architects should draw for work, many are additionally compelled to attract for pleasure. It’s simply what they do.
John Walsh
Notice: Rendered Futures can be exhibited in Christchurch, on the Sir Miles Warren Gallery, from 27 September to 2 November 2025.
Rendered Futures: Drawing structure is offered by Objectspace’s strategic associate ECC and supported by The Warren Belief. Color associate: Resene and product associate: Laminex.












