地址: New Scotland Yard, Westminster, London SW1A 2JL
An authentic cockney, Alfred Hitchcock never forgot the city where he was born and raised - London, experts say, is the subtext of his films, even the American ones. From Westminster to Charing Cross to the British Museum, there are many places throughout the British capital that he chose as locations for his film. The director sought to offer both the beautiful and ugly sides of the city, like a prism projecting a thousand faces of good and evil. But there was one “invisible” place that, for the author of Psycho, was an endless source of inspiration - the Black Museum, the crime museum of Scotland Yard, which the director visited regularly in search of inspiration and macabre details. Opened in 1875, the Black Museum hosts a blood-thirsty collection of exhibits - from Jack the Ripper to Doctor Crippen, the grim soul of London is narrated by objects that would drive any horror fan wild. There are the false De Beers diamonds and the stove used by serial killer Dennis Nilsen to eliminate the remains of his victims, the umbrella used to kill Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov and the pistol used by Edward Oxford in attempting to kill Queen Victoria. Top of the bottom - the chilling letter From Hell written by Jack the Ripper. Sadly, the museum is no longer open to the public - it is exclusively used for educating police and forensic scientists.
Paintings, sculptures, textiles and poetry by over 50 artists including Uzo Egonu, El Anatsui, Ladi Kwali and Ben Enwonwu chronicle the achievements of Nigerian artists working before and after the decade of the nation’s independence from British colonial rule in 1960.
Wimbledon 2025 runs from June 30 to July 13: the first edition with fully automated line calls. Jannik Sinner returns as ATP world number one after a WADA-imposed suspension. Carlos Alcaraz aims for a third consecutive title.
An exhibition dedicated to the evolution of sacred art in ancient India, connecting the origins of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism with devotional practices that are still alive today
Platform is a new initiative to expand our exhibition programme with free annual exhibitions showcasing the work of a designer or studio that is impacting contemporary design discourse. The inaugural exhibition features the work of Bethan Laura Wood.