Rendered Futures charts five decades of architectural drawing, capturing the final years of architecture as an exclusively hand-drawn discipline to today’s digital culture dominated by the aesthetics of the stylised render.
The exhibition brings together drawings from more than fifty Aotearoa architects, spanning recent graduates and practising architects across multiple generations; here, technical drawings, sketches and works of art all jockey for position. A breadth of mark-making is expressed, from creative exploration to the formative stages of the design and construction process, mapping the enduring modes of drawing that architects return to.
The diversity of work in Rendered Futures articulates architectural drawing as a shape-shifting and sometimes radical form. Not just a means of technical instruction and representation of the built realm, drawing can also be a site for advocacy, experimentation and cultural production, much of which isn’t visible beyond the discipline itself.
Taking a broad view across its timespan – a period of vast technological disruption to the tools of image-making – the exhibition considers how drawing is changing. The drawing process is increasingly codified through computer-aided design, standardising representations of architecture and impacting the way it is taught and communicated. Rendered Futures asks what this change could mean for drawing’s influence on the discipline; for its creative and critical potential in the futures to come.
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Rendered Futures: Drawing architecture is presented by Objectspace’s Strategic Partner ECC.
Colour Partner: Resene
Product Partner: Laminex

Hatch, Courtyard at Staff Housing, 2016

John Coop, Night in Tunisia, 2021