Skip to content
Join our Newsletter

Stardust touches down to give fans a closer look

David Bowie exhibit pays tribute to rock legend's legacies
img-0-7192220.jpg
David Bowie in concert. An exhibit on Bowie opens next year.

Ziggy Stardust's multi-coloured jumpsuit, a Union Jack coat, more than 50 other outlandish stage costumes, handwritten lyrics and album artwork from British singer David Bowie will go on show in London next year.

The David Bowie Is, exhibition will run from March 23 to July 28 at the Victoria and Albert Museum in central London and aims to explore the singer's creative process across five decades, featuring more than 300 objects.

"It's about a person who, through their art, design and performance, I think, has affected the way we live now," co-curator Victoria Broackes said.

"It's not designed as a retrospective. It's designed in the present tense. So, we do look at themes within his career that come back and forth, but what we want, is when you leave the exhibition, you have a sense of how Bowie has changed your world and the fact that there are elements of what he has done all around you."

Alongside Ziggy Stardust's jumpsuit will be more than 60 stage costumes, such as a Union Jack coat designed by Bowie and Alexander McQueen for his Earthling album cover and Japanese designer Kansai Yamamoto's decadent creations for his Aladdin Sane tour in 1973.

Visitors will also be able to see Bowie's handwritten lyrics, photography, films, music videos as well as his set designs, instruments and album artwork.

"What we find at the V&A, which is really great, is that despite living in a digital world, where so many things are possible at arm's length, actually seeing objects up close is still absolutely thrilling," Broackes added.

"I think that's an interesting process, to be able to actually look at the designs and how they created the finished object."

Much of the collection that will feature in the exhibition will come from the David Bowie Archive, the first time a museum has been granted access to the musician's private collection.

"We are thrilled to be hosting this exhibition of the world's most creative artist," said V&A director Martin Roth, who defended recent criticism that the show was not in keeping with the museum's art and design agenda.

"The V&A is uniquely placed to put on this exhibition. We are the world's No. 1 museum on art and design. We're also very, very strong on performance and theatre. Theatre and performance came back to the museum in 2007, so David Bowie fits perfectly within that genre."

Roth also dismissed rumours that Bowie was involved in the curation of the show, which were shot down by the artist himself on his Facebook page last week.

"Contrary to recent reports, I am not a co-curator and did not participate in any decisions relating to the exhibition," the message stated.

The exhibition has been in the making for two and half years and will form one of the museum's major shows next year. Tickets cost $14 ($22) and go on sale on Sept. 4.