Sarah Treadwell

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Sarah Treadwell
Occupation(s)Architect, artist, academic
AwardsChrystall Excellence Award
NZIA President's Award
Academic background
Alma materUniversity of Auckland
Unitec Institute of Technology
Thesis
Academic advisorsJohn Pusateri, Richard Fahey
Academic work
InstitutionsUniversity of Auckland
Notable studentsLynda Simmons

Sarah Treadwell is an artist, architect and academic in New Zealand. She was the first female full-time academic staff member in the School of Architecture and Planning at the Waipapa Taumata Rau the University of Auckland in New Zealand. Her academic career spanned from 1981 to 2017, her year of retirement. Treadwell was Head of School at the School of Architecture and Planning from 2009 to 2012.

Career[edit]

Treadwell graduated from the University of Auckland in 1976, before practicing in London.[1] In 1980, the Women's Institute of Architecture wrote an open letter to the head of the University of Auckland's School of Architecture and Planning, Allan Wild, pointing out that the lack of women lecturers was alienating female students.[1] The following year, Treadwell became the first woman to be appointed to the faculty, although she remained the only one for ten years, until Rosemary Scofield's appointment.[1][2]

In 1991 Treadwell contributed to the exhibition Home Made Home at the City Gallery Wellington.[3]

Treadwell completed her PhD in 1995 in the field of New Zealand architectural history, looking specifically at Rangiatea, the Māori Church at Ōtaki that was destroyed by fire in 1995.[4] She delivered the sixth Gordon H. Brown Art History lecture at Victoria University of Wellington in 2008, titled Rangiatea Revisited.[5]

Treadwell completed a Master of Design degree in 2018 at the Unitec Institute of Technology. Her thesis, titled Keeping watch: fabricating a space of hesitation involved the production of artwork around the MV Rena striking the Astrolabe Reef in 2011.[6] She was Head of School at the School of Architecture and Planning from 2009 to 2012, and retired in 2017.[1]

Treadwell is interested in gender issues in architecture, and taught a course on gender in architecture from 1986 onwards (first called Women and Architecture, and then Engendering Architecture). Most of the content in the early years focused on overseas women, but later included New Zealand architects. Students from her course interviewed Muriel Lamb, whose contributions to architecture had to this point been overlooked.[1] In 1983 Treadwell presented to the 'Gone to Kiwi' Architecture Student Congress in Auckland about whether women and men designed differently.[1] Research Treadwell conducted with Nicole Allan in 2012 found that from 2002 to 2011 only 19 per cent of contributors to Architecture New Zealand were women, with a similar bias in the names listed in project credits.[1] Treadwell's 2015 book with Lucy Treep, Architecture in an Expanded Field, examines the careers of New Zealand women "at the edges of architecture".[1]

Treadwell was a co-founder of Architecture + Women NZ (A+W NZ), along with Lynda Simmons, Julie Wilson and Megan Rule.[7] She is also a practising artist, and researched in the field of architectural drawing. Treadwell's leadership in the area of architectural drawing is credited with causing the adoption of sophisticated drawing methods at the university in the 1980s.[2] Her 2012 ink and watercolour Rena featured in the book Snapshot 500.[8]

Awards and honours[edit]

Treadwell was awarded a New Zealand Institute of Architects President's Award in 2013.[2] She was awarded a Chrystall Excellence Award in 2017, the award "celebrates the full and rich career of a female in the field of architecture."[9][10][1]

In 2017, the A+W NZ Tātuhi/Drawing Architecture archive was set up by Lynda Simmons to honour Treadwell's impact and career, it being the year of her retirement. The archive collects architectural drawings, chosen by Treadwell and a team, as a growing record of architectural drawing styles over time.[11][1]

Publications and exhibitions[edit]

  • Drawing Is/Not Building (2015) - an exhibition by Roland Snooks, Sarah Treadwell, Simon Twose. Te Pataka Toi Adam Art Gallery[12]
  • Drawing Is/Not Building (2016) - a book published by Te Pātaka Toi Adam Art Gallery at Te Herenga Waka—Victoria University of Wellington. Edited by Christina Barton, Sarah Treadwell and Simon Twose ISBN 978-1-877309-35-

Personal life[edit]

Treadwell is the daughter of architect Anthony Treadwell.[1]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Elizabeth Cox, ed. (2022). Making Space: A History of New Zealand Women in Architecture. Auckland: Massey University Press. ISBN 978-1-99-101634-8. OCLC 1347021085. OL 39960346M. Wikidata Q117788223.
  2. ^ a b c NZ Institute of Architects. "2013". NZ Institute of Architects (www.nzia.co.nz). Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  3. ^ Gatley, Julia; Walker, Paul (1 January 2014). Vertical living : the Architectural Centre and the remaking of Wellington. Auckland University Press. ISBN 978-1-86940-815-2.
  4. ^ Treadwell, Sarah (1995). European representations of the architecture of Rangiatea (PhD thesis). University of Auckland (via Worldcat). OCLC 228034901.
  5. ^ Treadwell, Sarah (2006). "Rangiatea revisited". natlib.govt.nz. Retrieved 21 May 2023.
  6. ^ Treadwell, Sarah (2018). Keeping watch : fabricating a space of hesitation (Master's thesis). Researchbank, Unitec Institute of Technology.
  7. ^ magazine, homestyle (1 August 2020). "Women in architecture: Let's get visible". homestyle magazine. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  8. ^ Julia Gatley; Sara Lee, eds. (2013). Snapshot 500 Architecture + Women New Zealand. Balasoglou Books. ISBN 978-0-9876595-5-2. Wikidata Q117865220.
  9. ^ "2017 A+W•NZ DULUX AWARDS". AWNZ. 2017. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  10. ^ "Winners: A+W•NZ Dulux Awards 2017". Architecture Now. Retrieved 21 May 2023.
  11. ^ "Women in architecture take centre stage". www.habitatbyresene.co.nz. 16 August 2022. Retrieved 19 May 2023.
  12. ^ "Drawing Is/Not Building & Living Cities 2011-". Pataka Toi Adam Art Gallery. Retrieved 22 May 2023.