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Focus On: Robin Hood Gardens centres the largest object in V&A East Storehouse: a 3-storey section from Robin Hood Gardens estate in Poplar, east London, which was demolished between 2017 and 2025.
Dance, memory and architecture collide in a day of live performance, movement workshops, and storytelling at V&A East Storehouse.
Get ready for the most important voting quiz of the year! You're stranded on a desert island - which V&A objects will you take with you?
A complex fashion icon, Marie Antoinette's timeless appeal is defined by her style, youth and notoriety. Explore the lasting influence of the most fashionable (and ill-fated) queen in history – with ...
Make new discoveries, explore untold stories and share ideas at V&A East Storehouse. With half a million works, it’s a sourcebook for your creativity.
The project encompasses a permanent curatorial post and an ambitious programme of activity that spans acquisitions, commissions, research, education, displays and events, including the annual V&A ...
Welcome to V&A Dundee - Scotland’s design museumWe've been shortlisted for a Kids In Museums Award! We have received the seal of approval from kids and their grown-ups across the country in this ...
Featuring highlights from a unique collection of etchings by Lucian Freud, most of which had never previously been exhibited, these trial proofs told the story of Freud's long collaboration with ...
Ahead of Adam Ant’s 2017 “Anthems” tour, Archive Assistant, Lynn Wood, gives an introduction to the Adam Ant costume collection in the V&A Department of Theatre and Performance. Musically 1980 was a ...
Your Collection: V&A East in Schools is a V&A East community engagement programme initiated by our director, Gus Casely-Hayford. As part of our ambition to open pathways into the creative industries ...
With a multitude of names from ‘Dutch Wax’ to ‘Liputa’, wax print textiles are found in African homes across the world and have become an important part of African cultures. Selvedge Magazine For many ...
The Butler-Bowdon Cope (a ceremonial cloak made for use in church services and processions) is made from some of the richest materials available to an embroiderer in 14th-century England.
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