I have found a post by John Fultz with pretty clear explanation of how graphics functionality works:
In version 6, the kernel has
absolutely no involvement whatsoever
in generating the rendered image.
The steps taken in displaying a
graphic in version 6 are very much
like those used in displaying
non-graphical output. It works as
follows:
1) The expression is evaluated, and
ultimately produces something with
head Graphics[] or Graphics3D[].
2) The resulting expression is passed
through MakeBoxes. MakeBoxes has a
set of rules which turns the graphics
expression into the box language which
the front end uses to represent
graphics. E.g.,
In[9]:= MakeBoxes[Graphics[{Point[{0,
0}]}], StandardForm]
Out[9]= GraphicsBox[{PointBox[{0,
0}]}]
Internally, we call this the "typeset"
expression. It may be a little weird
thinking of graphics as being
"typeset", but it's fundamentally the
same operation which happens for
typesetting (which has worked this way
for 11 years), so I'll use the term.
3) The resulting typeset expression is
sent via MathLink to the front end.
4) The front end parses the typeset
expression and creates internal
objects which generally have a
one-to-one correspondence to the
typeset expression.
5) The front end renders the internal
objects.
This means that in really conversion is made in the kernel by a call to MakeBoxes.
This call can be intercepted through high-level code:
list = {};
MakeBoxes[expr_, form_] /; (AppendTo[list, HoldComplete[expr]];
True) := Null;
HoldComplete[Rotate[Style[expr, Red], 0.5]]
ClearAll[MakeBoxes];
list
Here is what we get as output:

One can see that MakeBoxes does not respect HoldAllComplete attribute.
The full list of symbols which are auto-converted before sending to the FrontEnd one can get by using FormatValues:
In[1]:= list =
Select[Names["*"],
ToExpression[#, InputForm,
Function[symbol, Length[FormatValues@symbol] > 0, HoldAll]] &];
list // Length
During evaluation of In[1]:= General::readp: Symbol I is read-protected. >>
Out[2]= 162
InputFormshows that the expression is unchanged. Which leads to the question: why does this FE behavior bother you - which goals does it prevent you from accomplishing? Regarding the list of heads for which similar things happen, you can look at sayWrappersDump``WrapperToBoxesdefinition (not sure if those exhaust the list). – Leonid Shifrin Apr 11 '11 at 11:41HoldCompletevsHoldAllComplete! – Mr.Wizard Apr 11 '11 at 11:41RotationBox, notRotateBox. And yes,Rotatedoes get transformed intoRotationBoxinsideHoldCompleteinStandardForm(default). To see that, look at the box expression of the resulting output cell (CTRL+SHIFT+E). – Leonid Shifrin Apr 11 '11 at 14:33MakeBoxesfire, that the conversion to boxes takes place, just as in previous cases, and of course with the same result. If you wrapFullFormaround the lastLinkRead[link], you'll see that you are getting back the original expression. – Leonid Shifrin Apr 11 '11 at 20:16MakeBoxes, to produce the output cells in the notebook. Even if this happens in the kernel, this is probably a separate evaluation, after the main result is produced by the kernel as an expression. It is in this sense that I meant that the main evaluation done in the kernel is in agreement with the docs onHoldComplete. Once again - if we consider evaluation of expressions (and not their conversion into boxes), the evaluation is as documented. – Leonid Shifrin Apr 12 '11 at 9:18