The Victoria & Albert Museum is holding a
‘rapid-response collecting’ exhibition in Shenzhen, China, as part of
the Bi-City Biennale for Architecture and Urbanism.
The museum has already used this principle to exhibit a model of Cody Wilson’s Liberator – the world’s first 3D printed gun – and to buy a pair of Primark jeans in the week that the Rana Plaza factory in Bangladesh, which made clothes for Primark, collapsed, killing more than 1000 people.
Development model
Curated by the V&A’s Corinna Gardner and Kieran Long, the exhibitions features objects such as a guqin (a traditional musical instrument), a bra without undewiring and a handbook to the flora and fauna of Shenzhen.
Violetta Boxill, creative director of Alexander Boxill, says, ‘We needed a system that would be very flexible and concise – we weren’t sure what sort of exhibits we would be working with or even what the quality of the walls in the space would be.
Label carriers were designed to either sit on or hang off the main exhibition table.
Label development model
Boxill says, ‘We were producing labels right up until the day before the exhibition opened.’
No comments:
Post a Comment