
Imagine being able to visit a museum and examine up close thousand-year-old pottery, revel alone in jewellery from centuries past or peer inside a Versace bag.
Now London鈥檚 V&A has launched a revolutionary new exhibition space, where visitors can choose from some 250,000 objects, order something they want to spend time looking at, and have it delivered to a room for a private viewing.
Most museums have thousands of precious and historic items hidden away in their stores, which the public never gets to see or enjoy.
But the V&A Storehouse, which opened on May 31 in a specially converted warehouse, has come up with a radical new concept. And it is totally free.
鈥淢useums should be and are for everybody ... the V&A鈥檚 collection is for everybody. It belongs to everybody, and everyone should be able to have free, equitable, and meaningful access to it,鈥 said senior curator Georgia Haseldine.
鈥淪o this is a world first, never has anyone been able to be invited freely, without having to book into the same space as a national collection, on this scale.鈥
One fifth of the museum鈥檚 total collection is now available to be viewed and enjoyed in the four-storey building on the former site of the 2012 London Olympic Games.
No protective glass
鈥淚t鈥檚 fantastic, it鈥檚 so much better than an ordinary museum,鈥 enthused retired physics teacher Jane Bailey as she toured the floors.
鈥淚鈥檓 just really, really impressed by it. We鈥檝e only just heard about it, but it鈥檚 phenomenal.鈥
She was transfixed by the sight of the black and red drum kit which belonged to Keith Moon, from the band The Who, saying it would be great to be able to resuscitate the legendary drummer who died in 1978, to play a set for them.
Jostling for space, side-by-side on shelves in a massive hanger which resembles a DIY warehouse and stretches for more than 30 basketball courts, are everything from ceramics and tapestries, to paintings and toys from the Tudor period.
There is even a whole 15th-century gilded wooden ceiling from the now-lost Torrijos Palace in Spain, and the Kaufmann Office, a panelled room which is the only complete Frank Lloyd Wright interior outside of the United States.
A visitor looks at the artefacts exhibited in the main room of the newly opened museum V&A East Storehouse, in East London. London's V&A has launched a revolutionary new exhibition space, where visitors can choose from some 250,000 objects, order something they want to spend time looking at, and have it delivered to a room for a private viewing. Photo / Henry Nicolls, AFP
Also on display is a stunning 12m-tall stage cloth made for a 1924 Ballets Russes show, Le Train Bleu. The copy of a Pablo Picasso painting is so huge it has been rarely seen since its stage debut.
There is no protective glass.
One of the first visitors to the Storehouse was Princess Catherine, a patron of the V&A and keen art lover, who took a tour on Wednesday.
She described the collection as 鈥渆clectic鈥 as she used the 鈥渙rder an object鈥 system to look at a samples book from renowned 19th century English textiles designer William Morris as well as rolls of ornate textiles and a musical instrument.
All the works are available to the public seven days a week and can be reserved via an online booking system for a private viewing at a date and time of your choice.
Members of staff are on hand paying close attention as visitors don purple gloves and satisfy their curiosity, spending time with the object of their choice.
鈥楲ove letter鈥
It鈥檚 a huge departure from the usual admonishment of 鈥淒on鈥檛 touch!鈥 found in most museums seeking to protect their objects from damage.
Curator Haseldine acknowledged 鈥渨e have certainly met with some levels of scepticism and worry鈥.
But she said once the idea was explained properly, including 鈥渉ow meaningful it is to ... start to open up and give collections back to a community ... people just start to think creatively about how we can do this.鈥
American Manuel Garza said he thought the V&A Storehouse was 鈥渙ne of the most interesting spaces that just opened up here in London鈥.
Haseldine said 鈥渢his building is a love letter to objects鈥.
鈥淭o be able to see around the back of an object, to be able to look inside a dress, to be able to see the bottom of a pot, all these things are how we really learn about our material culture,鈥 she added.
Expert Kate Hill, who teaches cultural history at Lincoln University, said 鈥渋t鈥檚 pretty unusual for museums to open up their storehouses鈥.
鈥淢ost of the time they offer some 鈥榖ehind the scene鈥 tours, but their objects are not accessible. It鈥檚 visible but not accessible.鈥
Visitor Jane Bailey said: 鈥淚 would hope that this is the museum of the future, because some are very, very stuffy. We went to one recently and it was excruciating.鈥
-Agence France-Presse
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