[Image: “The Walled City (10-Mile Version)” by Andrew Kudless/Matsys].
A new exhibition opens next week at the Hubbell Street Galleries in San Francisco, part of the California College of the Arts, called Drawing Codes: Experimental Protocols of Architectural Representation. The idea behind the group show is to look at “the relationship between code and drawing” (emphases theirs), or “how rules and constraints inform the ways we document, analyze, represent, and design the built environment.”
Drawing Codes is curated by Andrew Kudless and Adam Marcus, with Clayton Muhleman, and it features work by David Gissen, Erin Besler, Jimenez Lai, Elena Manferdini, the Oyler Wu Collaborative, Rael San Fratello, and many more.
As Kudless—of Matsys fame—pointed out to me over email, the curators “gave all of the participants a set of codes that they had to follow (e.g. all black and white, orthographic projection, 25″ x 25″, etc.),” using this set of constraints to, among other things, foreground differences in approach between each participating architect.
If everyone’s doing the same thing, then how each person does it becomes more revealing.
[Image: “Half-Hearted Diamonds” by Jimenez Lai/Bureau Spectacular].
Perhaps ironically, it was actually the drawing by Kudless himself—which I first saw on Instagram—that caught my interest.
Called “The Walled City (10-Mile Version),” that project imagines an entire metropolis that is nothing but one, continuous wall.
Kudless explained that it came about by posing himself a rhetorical question: “What would a city look like if it was a wall and nothing else? I’ve been fascinated with walls that have grown thick enough to be buildings in themselves. From medieval European city walls to the Great Wall in China, there is something really interesting about taking something that is ostensively about separating two territories and turning into an inhabitable space in its own right.”
[Image: Close-up from “The Walled City (10-Mile Version)” by Andrew Kudless/Matsys].
The results: a rule-constrained exploration of how a wall could become a city.
The various social and architectural functions distributed around the massive roofscape included, for example, Rooftop Antenna, Rooftop Bar, Rooftop Cafe, Rooftop Deck, Rooftop Exhaust, Rooftop Film, Rooftop Garden, Rooftop Hotel Pool, and so on.
Interestingly, Kudless also pointed out that, if he were to run the same generative script again, it would likely produce “a similar, but not identical city,” and it would almost certainly not result in a wall exactly ten miles in length (which, in this case, was purely a coincidence, he explained).
In any case, I’ve been impressed by Kudless’s work for a long time; check out these older posts on his projects Nevada Sietch and robotic drawing protocols, for example, and then stop by the exhibition when it opens next week. There will be a reception on January 19 at 5:30pm at 161 Hubbell Street. More info.
(source: Geoff Manaugh, BLDGBLOG-Posted on January 13, 2017)
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Dr. YS RAO
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