Just at the edge of the sea in Te Waero o te Hiku, Kaikōura, Aotearoa sits an old, run-down family house. It’s a tiny shed-turned-home hand-built in 1953. Earthquakes and southerlies have battered its yellow painted 50’s optimism over the years, and it’s more like flotsam from the sea and reef than a statement of human resistance. The little house seems to be in conversation with its vast context. It has complex miniature microclimates: tiny variations in surface, dust, light, air, sound, birds nesting in the roof—as well as memory, lost gardens, clumsy attempts at repair. Outside are enormous weather systems, immense sea, dynamic rock. Old House explores the strange architecture of this personal and planetary conversation through multi-media architectural drawing installations. Multiple ‘sketch creatures’ roam through a gallery drawn from hand bent music wire, projected images, graphite, stones, seaweed, as well as VR portals, smell and sound. Participants engage with these multi-sensorial architectural sketches, becoming immersed in unruly architectures of the old Kaikōura house and its dynamic landscape context. Old House is part of an ongoing project exploring relations between personal and planetary dynamics through ‘expanded’ architectural drawings. We propose a video presentation articulating the research: its poiétic scalar relations—how intimate, personal histories of the house intersect and intra-act with abstract histories in the vast ‘planetary’ landscape beyond. The Old House research looks to destabilise relations between drawing, drawer and the worlds being drawn, and in doing so, highlight the intertwining of personal and planetary histories.
Anastasia Globa is a researcher, academic and designer working in the field of architecture, with strong research interests in algorithmic design, advanced manufacturing, simulations, data visualization, real-time interactive applications, and immersive environments. She is a Senior lecturer at the University of Sydney.