V&A East Opens in London With $180 Million Expansion

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v&a east

The Victoria & Albert Museum has unveiled a bold new chapter in east London. With v&a east, the institution is betting that young visitors will respond to a fresher way of seeing its collection.

A new museum for east London

The $180 million outpost began welcoming the public over the weekend. It aims to re-engage local audiences by linking historic treasures with contemporary life.

Its boxy, beige facade, pierced by pointed shards of window, was designed by Irish architects O’Donnell + Tuomey. Reviews have been mixed, yet the building gives the museum a distinct identity.

That said, the new structure stands apart from the original V&A in west London, the ornate Victorian landmark devoted to design and the decorative arts. Senior curator Zofia Trafas White said the collection now enters new dialogues around topical issues in the world today.

Inside the Why We Make galleries

At the heart of the museum are two permanent Why We Make galleries, with over 500 objects selected with local Londoners in mind. They span from 1100 to the present day and focus on identity, wellbeing, social justice, and environmental responsibility.

Moreover, the displays avoid chronology, geography, and materials. Instead, they use a thematic exhibition design that brings unexpected links into view.

In v&a east, visitors can move from Leigh Bowery to Vivienne Westwood and Rei Kawakubo in the section called Breaking Boundaries. Another gallery, Our Place in the World, places a self-portrait by Sofonisba Anguissola beside work connected to Claude Cahun and Maud Sulter.

The curator said bringing objects together in conversation reveals new connections between makers across time. The approach highlights shared attitudes and agendas, while also pointing to positive change for people and planet.

Black British music takes center stage

The first temporary show is The Music is Black: A British Story, which traces 125 years of Black British music through around 200 works from the collection. It spotlights Winifred Atwell, Shirley Bassey, Jme, and Lil Simz, while also mapping reggae, ska, rock, drum & bass, grime, and U.K. garage.

However, the exhibition is not only a history lesson. It also uses records and sound-related artifacts from Black British cultural life to build a multi-sensory experience.

Works by Nigerian modernist Ben Enwonwu, Denzil Forrester, Frank Bowling, Golden Lion winner Sonia Boyce, and Rene Matić deepen that story. A painted vest worn by Stormzy at Glastonbury Festival in 2019 adds another memorable reference point.

New commissions and public access

Alongside the exhibition program, the museum is launching new contemporary works. These include an 18-foot bronze statue by British artist Thomas J Price, which stands above the entrance and shows a young Black woman holding a smartphone.

Moreover, the contemporary art galleries program begins with a film by Carrie Mae Weems, a sculptural drawing by Es Devlin, a video game by Lawrence Lek, and a blue-tinted stained-glass work by Tania Bruguera. Gus Casely-Hayford said everyone is welcome and should see their stories represented.

V&A East sits in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, near London’s East Bank cultural district. It is close to its sister site, v&a east storehouse, which opened last May and covers a four-story complex with 172,222 square feet.

That facility holds around 250,000 objects, 350,000 books, and 1,000 archives. Visitors can move freely through the aisles without typical museum signposting, a format that appears to be working.

According to The Art Newspaper, first-six-month visitor data shows nearly a third of visitors were under 35, while more than 45 percent of U.K. visitors were from minority ethnic groups. The numbers suggest young audience engagement is already finding an audience.

With its new east London base, the V&A is extending its reach while testing a more open museum model. The early response suggests the institution may have found a format that connects heritage with the present.

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