Programme: Mon - Thu 10 am - 5 pm | Fri - Sun 10 am - 6 pm
Tickets: £ 14.38
Location: The Design Museum
Adresse: 224-238 Kensington High Street, London W8 6AG
An exhibition that marks a turning point in the way design is conceived. Curated in collaboration with Future Observatory, the museum's national program for ecological transition, the exhibition brings together over 140 works spanning art, architecture, science, and technology. The aim is to explore how design can contribute to the planet's well-being by shifting focus beyond human needs to include those of animals, plants, and other living beings. Among the featured works is Julia Lohmann's monumental seaweed installation, which appears to grow organically from the exhibition space, symbolizing the potential of sustainable, living materials. Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg presents a tapestry exploring pollinators' perspectives, while the MOTH (More Than Human Life Project) collective offers an eight-meter mural illustrating the global movement to grant legal rights to rivers and other ecosystems. Other projects include artworks designed for octopuses and installations promoting multispecies cohabitation. The exhibition highlights how design can become a means to rethink our relationship with the natural world, suggesting creative solutions to address the climate emergency. Through an interdisciplinary approach, More than Human invites visitors to consider design not only as a response to human needs but as an inclusive practice that acknowledges the interdependence of all life forms.
An exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery dedicated to Stanisław Wyspiański, one of the most important Polish artists of the 19th century. Sixteen portraits on display, many of which have never been shown before in Britain, to tell the story of the artistic talent of a leading figure of the modernist movement, Young Poland.
In response to the pain and devastation caused by World War II, Alberto Giacometti's works propose a new perspective on humanity and the collective psyche.
Elevating fashion and portrait photography to an art form, Cecil Beaton's photographs defined an era, capturing beauty, glamour and star power in the interwar and postwar eras.