Design Museum by John Pawson

Design Museum by John Pawson

London’s Design Museum have unveiled designs by British architect John Pawson for their new home in the former Commonwealth Institute building in west London.

Design Museum by John Pawson

Top: new design museum, second floor
Above: new design museum, second floor showing the permanent exhibition 

Due to open to the public in 2014, the £80 million plans include galleries for permanent and temporary exhibition spaces, an auditorium and a library, which will accompany a separate housing development by Dutch firm OMA.

Design Museum by John Pawson

Above: new Design Museum, entrance foyer

The former Commonwealth Institute, which was completed in the 1960s, hasn’t been used for over ten years but will retain its hyperbolic paraboloid roof structure in the refurbishment.

Design Museum by John Pawson

Above: new Design Museum, exterior view

New glazed entrances will lead in towards the galleries located on the ground floor, basement and second floor, giving the museum three times the exhibition space of its current home at Shad Thames on the Southbank.

Design Museum by John Pawson

Above: existing Commonwealth Institute building, exterior view

See all our stories about the Design Museum here and listen to our podcast interview with John Pawson here.

Design Museum by John Pawson

Above: existing Commonwealth Institute building, interior

Visuals are by Alex Morris Visualisation. Photos of the existing building are by Luke Hayes.

Design Museum by John Pawson

Above: existing Commonwealth Institute building, interior

Here are some more details from the museum:


£80m PLANS UNVEILED TO CREATE WORLD’S LEADING DESIGN MUSEUM IN LONDON

The Design Museum today unveiled plans to create the world’s leading museum of design and architecture at the former Commonwealth Institute building in Kensington, London. Designs for the site have been produced by two of the world’s most innovative architectural practices: John Pawson has redesigned the interior of the Grade 2* listed building and OMA has planned the surrounding residential development.

The move will allow the new Design Museum to become a word class centre for design, nurturing British talent and its international influence on design of all kinds. It will bring the museum into Kensington’s cultural quarter, where it will join the V&A, Science Museum, Natural History Museum, Royal College of Art and Serpentine Gallery, creating a platform for the promotion and support of the next generation of creative talent.

The new building will open to the public in 2014, giving the Design Museum three times more space to showcase its unique collection. The museum aims to double its visitor numbers to 500,000 a year, and will greatly expand its education and public events programme with state of the art facilities.

The 1960s Commonwealth Institute building has lain dormant for over a decade. Its refurbishment will give a neglected London icon a new life and purpose and will revitalise an important area of West London. In July 2010 the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea granted planning permission to Chelsfield Partners and the IIchester Estate to modify the Grade 2* listed building and for a residential development. The design team for the new project has been assisted by Lord Cunliffe, a leading member of the original architectural team for the Commonwealth Institute in 1958, and by James Sutherland, the building’s original structural engineer.

The new Design Museum, which is an £80 million project, will open in 2014. The Design Museum fundraising target is £44.66 million of which it has secured more than 60% through the support of a number of individuals and trusts and foundations.

The Museum announced today that The Dr Mortimer & Theresa Sackler Foundation has pledged to support the project, making a generous donation to create The Sackler Library, a learning resource at the heart of the new Design Museum. Other major donations include The Conran Foundation, which has pledged £17m, The Heritage Lottery Fund which has made a first stage grant towards an application of £4.95m, The Wolfson Foundation, The Sir Siegmund Warburg’s Voluntary Settlement, The Hans and Marit Rausing Charitable Trust, The Atkin Foundation and, in addition, a further £2.75m has been raised in early stage fundraising from a small number of individual donors.

Culture Minister Ed Vaizey, said “It is immensely exciting to see the plans for the new Design Museum at the Commonwealth Institute in Kensington. The UK leads the world in design and architecture and it is entirely appropriate that we should be creating the world’s greatest Design Museum at this iconic London landmark. The new Design Museum will be a truly outstanding visitor attraction, learning resource and celebration of the best of British creativity. It is only through the generosity of others that this has become possible and I would like to extend my gratitude to all those who have made this possible.”

The Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, said “From the Olympic Park to the new bus for London, our city is a hotbed of creativity, the epicentre of design, and deserves a world-class museum to celebrate the amazing work being created here in the UK and around the world. Housed in an iconic architectural landmark and offering state of the art learning facilities, this new museum puts design firmly in the spotlight and will become a must see destination for visitors as well as designers and students.”

Deyan Sudjic, Director of the Design Museum, said “This is an important step forward for the Design Museum. We are very excited by all the work that John Pawson and the rest of the design team have done. They have put forward a brilliant strategy to bring the former Commonwealth Institute back to life, which will allow the public to see the essential qualities of this historic listed building, and make a wonderful new home for the Design Museum.”

John Pawson, architect, said “The most exciting thing about the project is that, at the end of it all, London will have a world-class museum of design, with galleries for permanent and temporary exhibitions, education spaces and a library. There is particularly nice symbolism in the fact that in making this legacy for future generations, we are saving a work of iconic architecture. I hope the result will demonstrate that you don’t need to demolish old buildings to make wonderful new public space.”

Reinier de Graaf of OMA adds “In conceiving a new future for London’s former Commonwealth Institute, we pay tribute to a period that continues to inform contemporary architecture.”

Sir Stuart Lipton, Chairman, Chelsfield, said “We are delighted to be supporting the Design Museum to realise its vision of becoming the world’s leading centre for design and architecture. Britain’s designers are taking the lead internationally and it is fitting that there will be a world-class centre for design and architecture in London.”

ARCHITECTURAL STATEMENT
JOHN PAWSON

A centre of design for London

The goal of the project is the creation of a world-class museum of design in the heart of London, with galleries for permanent and temporary exhibitions, education spaces and a design reference library. The architectural vision developed to realise this goal has been profoundly shaped by the fact that the new Design Museum’s permanent home is within the skin of an existing building – the Grade 2* listed former Commonwealth Institute, designed by Robert Matthews, Johnson-Marshall & Partners, which opened in 1962. Driving the process of reclaiming this iconic example of post-war British Modernism as a contemporary cultural space has been the wish to preserve and enhance its inherent architectural qualities for future generations of Londoners and visitors to the city. The outcome should be a building that feels as though it has retuned itself.

A new public space in Holland Park

This process of natural evolution and readjustment begins with the character of the relationship of the new Design Museum with its setting in Holland Park. Freedom of access will allow the public to move comfortably from the green spaces of the park to the interior spaces of the building in a relaxed, open and instinctive manner. In line with the wider design strategy for the building, greater transparency is introduced on the north and east facades. Glazed entrances are created to the ground floor foyer and the existing stained glass windows, currently installed on the south façade, are relocated to the north façade, adjacent to the new entrance from Holland Park.

Dynamic spatial experiences

Once inside, visitors will be naturally drawn up through the atrium space towards the hyperbolic paraboloid roof structure – the defining architectural gesture of the original design. The central staircase leads to the mezzanine level – an echo of the original dais, at the centre of the exhibition building. As in the original building, this level offers a chance to view the whole building, as well as providing space for exhibiting a key piece from a visiting exhibition or the permanent collection. As one moves upwards through the central void, so the framed view of the roof will widen and transform, assisted by the enlarged openings in the top floor slab, creating a dynamic experience that will change according to the time of day and the light conditions. Providing sightlines to all of the building’s principal spaces, the central void acts as a key medium for orientation and navigation. From the entrance foyer, a visitor will see the entire route through the building, winding up from the central platform around the opening at first floor level to the permanent exhibition space on the top floor and the sweeping curve of the roof. The material palette is purposefully restricted, with concrete terrazzo floors at basement and ground levels and hardwood used for the remaining floors and also for wall panelling.

Layout

The programme is split between five floors, providing a total around 10,000m2. The museum’s main exhibition space is located on the ground floor, together with the café, bookshop and design store. The first floor contains the administration and learning departments, design reference library and an area of open storage where the museum’s collection may be accessed for research purposes. An exhibition of the permanent collection, designed by Studio Myerscough, is located on the top floor, where the roof soars up to 16m above one’s head, alongside the restaurant, event space and the members’ room, all of which will enjoy views over Holland Park. The second exhibition space and the auditorium are located at basement level, which also accommodates curatorial spaces, workshops, kitchen and back of house areas.

Opening up sightlines to the hyperbolic paraboloid roof

In the existing building, the central concrete section of the roof rises up through the building on two structural supports, arches over the central space and then down towards the top floor. The floor slab opens up around the structure, allowing it to pass through to the floor below. To give the central roof structure the same freedom, two new openings are formed in the new top floor slab. The larger opening relates to the central void and an additional smaller opening visually connects The Sackler Library on the first floor to the permanent exhibition space. The creation of the second opening allows further views up to the roof from the first floor level, as well as allowing views into the workings of the museum for visitors to the permanent exhibitions on the second floor.

Horizontal elements

A key part of the design rationale is for the floor slabs to be clearly expressed as strong horizontal elements. The slab edges are therefore finished in white, as in the original building, contrasting with the timber walls and defining the volumes of the first and second floors. To reinforce this idea, all volumes, including the lift cores on the top floor, are located around the perimeter of the building.

Structure

One of the key elements to the building is the structural design developed by Arup to retain and preserve the original roof structure. These complex proposals will allow the internal floors of the existing building to be demolished, a new basement to be built across the site and the new structure of the museum building to be constructed under the roof.

The existing fabric of the building has shaped how the new structural design has developed. The rhythm of the edge support mullions sets up a typical structural grid of approximately 9m x 9m. Shear walls, built in as part of the service cores distributed through the building, will brace the structural grid.

A series of piles, temporary beams and trusses will be built around and through the existing structure to support the internal roof support columns and the roof edge support mullions. The external walls and internal structure will then be demolished and the new structure built up around the temporary works until it can support the roof. The temporary supports will then be removed and the new structure completed, to allow the fit-out work to commence.

Critics’ reactions to Terence Conran: The Way We Live Now at the Design Museum


Dezeen Wire:
a new exhibition documenting the career of Terence Conran has provoked a flurry of media interest in the man who founded retail brand Habitat and London’s Design Museum.

In a video filmed at the exhibition Terence Conran: The Way We Live Now, Design Museum director Deyan Sudjic tells The Guardian‘s design critic Jonathan Glancey that Conran is “a serial entrepreneur [whose] energy is extraordinary.” Glancey explains that the exhibition demonstrates how, as Conran developed his empire of stores and restaurants, “his love for hedonism and easy living stayed.”

BBC Radio 4 broadcast an interview in which Conran reveals that he has given so much of his personal wealth to the Design Museum that he is “not sitting on a large amount of capital” – BBC

In the Evening Standard Conran states that the Design Museum’s future home in South Kensington “will be a must-visit place just as Tate Modern has become a must-visit place,” and in The Express he adds that he hopes the current exhibition will be “an inspiration for schoolchildren and young designers to see what you can achieve in the design world.”

See a blog post by Elle Decoration editor Michelle Ogundehin lamenting the decline of Habitat and a previous story in which The Observer’s Rowan Moore suggests that Conran is a more successful businessman than designer.

Terence Conran: The Way We Live Now is on show at the Design Museum until 4 March

Design Museum move will “help nurture a new generation of creative talent”- Deyan Sudjic


Dezeen Wire:
the director of London’s Design Museum Deyan Sudjic claims the museum’s new home at the former Commonwealth Institute will offer a platform for future designers and that Britain can regain its reputation as creative power, “provided we go on investing in design” – The Guardian

Sudjic describes the Design Museum’s original incarnation at the Victoria & Albert museum as “a little like an upmarket squatter in the V&A basement,” but suggests that “contemporary design is now firmly on the cultural agenda.” He claims that Britain must support design education in order to stay ahead of emerging economies, adding that “design is a way to create or safeguard jobs.”

James Dyson also recently wrote an article on the importance of design to the British economy and we previously reported on the Design Museum’s current building being up for sale.

Conran’s designs “don’t quite communicate the fun he has got out of life”- The Guardian


Dezeen Wire:
in his latest article for The Guardian, architecture and design critic Rowan Moore interviews Terence Conran ahead of an exhibition dedicated to his career at the Design Museum, which opens on 16 November.

In the article Moore suggest that Conran’s greatest successes have been the businesses he’s founded rather than the products or interiors he’s designed, which Moore adds are “a little too managed, manipulated, packaged and don’t quite communicate the fun he has got out of life, as if constrained by some invisible boundary.”

Design Museum building for sale


Dezeen Wire:
the Design Museum has announced that the building at Butler’s Wharf in London, which has been its home since 1989, is up for sale.

The museum will continue to present exhibitions at the building until 2014 when it will relocate to the former Commonwealth Institute building in Kensington, which is to be converted by architect John Pawson.

Here is some more information from the Design Museum:


Design Museum Building Up For Sale

The former warehouse building originally built in the 1950s and used to ripen bananas imported from the Caribbean, which is the current home of the Design Museum at Shad Thames, Butlers Wharf, London is up for sale through Cushman & Wakefield.  The museum has occupied the building since 1989 and will continue its busy programme of exhibitions at the site until its new home at the former Commonwealth Institute opens in 2014.

The sale is the result of the Design Museum’s plans to relocate to the former Commonwealth Institute building in Kensington. The move will give the Design Museum three times more space to show a wide range of exhibitions and showcase its collection. The ambition is to create the world’s leading design museum.

The Conran Foundation currently owns the lease of the Shad Thames building and has pledged to donate the proceeds from the sale of the lease to the Design Museum’s capital project.

Leading designer John Pawson will convert the interior of the Commonwealth Institute building to create a new home for the Design Museum. The scheme for the surrounding development designed by Rem Koolhaass’s OMA was granted planning permission in July 2010.

Dezeenwire

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Interview: Wim Crouwel at the Design Museum

Interview: Wim Crouwel at the Design Museum

Dezeen interviewed Dutch graphic designer Wim Crouwel last week on the eve of the opening of the exhibition Wim Crouwel – A Graphic Design Odyssey at the Design Museum in London.

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In the first movie (above), which was filmed at the Andaz Hotel in London, Crouwel talks about the exhibition as well as wallpaper and a rug based on his typographic designs that feature in a room at the hotel.

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In the second movie, Crouwel talks in more depth about stages of his career.

See our earlier story for more details about the exhibition, which continues at the Design Museum until 3 July.

Watch all our movies »


See also:

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John Pawson at the
Design Museum
David Adjaye at the
Design Museum
Dieter Rams at the
Design Museum

Wim Crouwel – A Graphic Odyssey at the Design Museum by 6a Architects

Wim Crouwel A Graphic Odyssey at the Design Museum by 6a Architects

Here are some pictures of 6a Architects‘ exhibition design for Wim Crouwel – A Graphic Odyssey, on show at the Design Museum in London.

Wim Crouwel – A Graphic Odyssey at the Design Museum by 6a Architects

Original sketches, posters, catalogues and archive photography plus film and video are displayed along a 20 meter-long white table.

Wim Crouwel – A Graphic Odyssey at the Design Museum by 6a Architects

The show presents work spanning 60 years of the Dutch graphic designer’s career including the identity he created for the Stedelijk Museum from 1967 onwards, the New Alphabet typeface from 1967 and Dutch postal stamps that were in circulation 1976–2002.

Wim Crouwel – A Graphic Odyssey at the Design Museum by 6a Architect

The exhibition continues until 3 July.

More about 6a Architects on Dezeen »
More about the Design Museum on Dezeen »

Wim Crouwel – A Graphic Odyssey at the Design Museum by 6a Architect

Here are some more details from the architects:


Wim Crouwel A graphic odyssey Design Museum

The Design Museum celebrates the prolific career of the Dutch graphic designer Wim Crouwel in this his first UK retrospective. Regarded as one of the leading designers of the twentieth century, Crouwel embraced a new modernity to produce typographic designs that captured the essence of the emerging computer and space age of the early 1960s. This exhibition, spanning over 60 years, will cover Crouwelʼs rigorous design approach and key moments in his career including his work for design practice ʻTotal Designʼ, the identity for the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, as well as his iconic poster, print, typography and lesser known exhibition design. The exhibition will also highlight Crouwelʼs rigorous design approach exploring his innovative use of grid-based layouts and typographic systems to produce consistently striking asymmetric visuals.

Wim Crouwel – A Graphic Odyssey at the Design Museum by 6a Architect

Original sketches, posters, catalogues and archive photography will be on display alongside films and audio commentary. In addition to celebrating Crouwelʼs career this exhibition will also explore his legacy and influence on contemporary graphic design with commentary from leading industry figures including Peter Saville and Stefan Sagmeister.

Wim Crouwel – A Graphic Odyssey at the Design Museum by 6a Architect

Designed by 6a Architects, in collaboration with graphic designers Spin, the exhibition creates a subtle backdrop to Crouwelʼs vivid works. The gallery was stripped back and opened up, allowing a twenty-metre long white table into the space. Exhibits are arranged across its surface, a figurative white page to the exhibitsʼ colourful intensity. Visitors move around, through and in-between its openings, reminiscent of Crouwelʼs fondness for three dimensional space in a two dimensional design. Crouwelʼs own commentaries explain the works, punctuated with striking portraits of the designer across the decades. The simple, paired down design reveals Crouwelʼs surprising tactility, a digital designer working in the analogue age.

Exhibition Design by 6a Architects. Exhibition graphics by Spin.


See also:

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South London Gallery extension by 6A ArchitectsRaven Row by
6a Architects
More Exhibitions

Hulger and Samuel Wilkinson win Brit Insurance Design of the Year Award 2011

Plumen 001 by Hulger

British designers Hulger and Samuel Wilkinson have been awarded the Brit Insurance Design of the Year Award for their Plumen 001 light bulb (above) at a ceremony at the Design Museum in London today.

Plumen 001 by Hulger

Hulger describe the sculptural CFL bulb as “the world’s first designer low-energy light bulb”.

Plumen 001 by Hulger

More about the design in our earlier story.

Plumen 001 by Hulger

Over 90 shortlisted designs (see our earlier story) across the fields of architecture, product, furniture, graphics, fashion, interactive and transport design remain on show at the museum until 7 August.

Plumen 001 by Hulger

Listen to our podcast with chair of the jury Stephen Bayley »
See the seven category winners »
See the full shortlist »

Plumen 001 by Hulger

More about the awards »

Here are some details from the Design Museum:


Stylish low energy light bulb wins the 2011 Brit Insurance Design of the Year

Beautifully innovative UK entry wins coveted international design award

British designer Samuel Wilkinson and product design company Hulger, have won the Brit Insurance Design of the Year 2011 for their stunning redesign of the low energy light bulb. Beating over 90 entries to claim the winning title, 2011 Jury Chair Stephen Bayley presented the award at today’s awards ceremony held at the Design Museum.

The Plumen 001 is an imaginatively sculpted energy saving light bulb, its beautiful silhouette and organic form was chosen as the overall winner from the seven category winners as the Brit Insurance Design of the Year. Stephen Bayley, 2011 Jury Chair said of the winning entry ‘The Plumen light bulb is a good example of the ordinary thing done extraordinarily well, bringing a small measure of delight to an everyday product.’

Low-energy light bulbs have never been regarded as a stylish product, the Plumen addresses this by creating an aesthetic bulb which works just like any low-energy bulb. By bending the glass tubes of a light bulb, Plumen have designed a product that uses 80% less energy and lasts eight times longer than an incandescent bulb. Compared with the standard fluorescent light, Plumen 001 is a beautiful light bulb designed to be seen.

Deyan Sudjic, Director of the Design Museum commented: ‘A worthy winner that is both beautiful and smart. It does away with the superfluous to achieve maximum economy of means. It’s a bulb that doesn’t need a shade and so goes a long way to make up for the loss of the Edison original.’

Jury member Will Self added: ‘I don’t think any of the judges feel this is the dernier cri in terms of what will be done with the low-energy light bulb, but if you’ll forgive the pun – they are definitely a light leading the way. 2011 was not a year to reward high-end design devised purely for conceptual reasons or added-value results. We felt these bulbs were neat, appealing and covetable in the right, affordable way. Light is, of course, primary to design, without it there can be very little, if any. The design of light sources is thus an elemental component of a design aesthetic.’

The Plumen 001 along with the other shortlisted designs are currently on show at the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year exhibition at the Design Museum until August 7 2011.


See also:

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Winner 2010:
Min-Kyu Choi
Winner 2009
Shepard Fairey
Winner 2008:
Yves Béhar

Dezeen podcast: Stephen Bayley on Designs of the Year 2011

Dezeen podcast: in this recording for the Design Museum in London, design commentator and one of the founders of the museum Stephen Bayley talks about the Brit Insurance Design of the Year 2011, on show at the museum until 7 August.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

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In the podcast, Bayley talks about his role chairing the jury for the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year awards, founding the museum with Terence Conran in the 1980s and how to judge whether design matters.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

Nearly 100 shortlisted designs across the fields of architecture, product, furniture, graphics, fashion, interactive and transport design will be on show at the museum until 7 August 2011.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

The seven category winners are due to be announced on Monday 28 February and the overall winner will be announced at a ceremony on 15 March.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

See the full shortlist in our earlier story.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

See also:

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year winner 2010
Brit Insurance Designs of the Year winner 2009
Brit Insurance Designs of the Year winner 2008

Exhibition photographs are by Luke Hayes.

Here are some more details from the Design Museum:


Showcasing a year in design, the fourth annual Brit Insurance Design Awards features an international shortlist ranging from Yves Behar’s Swarovski Chandeliers to concrete Emergency Shelters designed in Wales. Nominations also include the Apple iPad as well as six different app’s including the popular Angry Birds game.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

Industry experts have nominated innovative and engaging designs from around the world across seven categories: Architecture, Fashion, Furniture, Graphics, Interactive, Product and Transport. Stephen Bayley will chair the 2011 jury and will be joined by art and design curator Janice Blackburn OBE, graphic designer Mark Farrow, novelist Will Self, Pro Vice-Chancellor of Kingston University Penny Sparke and Simon Waterfall co-founder of digital agency Poke. We are pleased to announce that Bill Moggeridge, Director of the Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum, New York will also join this year’s jury.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

The nominations will be on show at the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year Exhibition at the Design Museum from 16 February – 7 August 2011. From this comprehensive list, the jury will select the seven category winners to be announced on 28 February 2011. The overall Brit Insurance Design of the Year will be announced at the Awards Dinner on 15 March 2011 and this year’s awards trophy will be exclusively designed by Ross Lovegrove.

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

Alex Newson, curator of the Brit Insurance Designs of the Year exhibition comments, “The sheer breadth of the shortlist reaffirms the importance of good design and how it can help improve daily lives or even refresh the familiar. Whether it is through ingenious temporary home solutions or a new cycle scheme for London, it is a fascinating list of nominees.”

Brit Insurance Designs of the Year 2011

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See also:

.

Winner 2010:
Min-Kyu Choi
Winner 2009
Shepard Fairey
Winner 2008:
Yves Béhar

Dezeen podcast: Drawing Fashion at the Design Museum

Dezeen podcast: in this latest podcast episode for the Design Museum in London, fashion drawing collector Joelle Chariau talks to artists Mats Gustafson, Francois Berthoud, Aurore de la Morinerie and Paul Caranicas about Drawing Fashion, an exhibition of Joelle’s collection on show at the museum until 6 March 2010.

Above: drawing by Antonio Lopez

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The show includes work from the beginning of the twentieth century to the present day, created for fashion houses including Chanel, Dior, Comme des Garçons and McQueen, and collected by Chariau over the past 30 years.

Above: drawing by Francois Berthoud

The exhibition was designed by London architects Carmody Groarke (see our earlier story).

Above: drawing by Mats Gustafson

To coincide with the exhibition, a talk at the museum on Wednesday 26 January will feature milliner Stephen Jones in conversation with Drawing fashion curator Colin McDowell. Book tickets here.

Above: drawing by Aurore de la Morinerie

Exhibition photographs are by Luke Hayes.

Here are some more details from the Design Museum:


Drawing Fashion celebrates a unique collection of some of the most remarkable fashion illustrations from the twentieth and twenty first centuries. These original works define the fine art of illustrating fashion, from the collections of Chanel, Dior, Comme des Garçons and Poiret as well as Viktor & Rolf, Lacroix and McQueen.

The exhibition showcases fashion illustrators at their creative heights: Lepape at the beginning of the century, Gruau in the 40′s and 50′s, Antonio throughout the 60s, 70s and 80s, to current artists Mats Gustafson, Aurore de la Morinerie and Francois Berthoud. Film-clips, music and photography sit alongside the original illustrations to reflect not only the spirit and the style of the decades but also the wider social and cultural changes of the century.

It is the first time this collection, which was put together over the past 30 years by Joelle Chariau of Galerie Bartsch & Chariau, has been displayed.

Stephen Jones in conversation with Colin McDowell
Wednesday 26 January 2011, 7.30pm
£15 / £7.50 members

Milliner to the stars Stephen Jones will join Drawing Fashion guest curator Colin McDowell for a conversation about the inspiration behind his striking designs. Often described as whimsical yet current, his work echoes the flair of a drawn line and inspires illustration. Tickets include entry to current exhibitions before the talk.

www.designmuseum.org/talks

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David Adjaye at the
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