5 things to know about V&A East Museum

This article was first published by the V&A.

The V&A East Museum will open on Saturday 18 April 2026 in the Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park, just a short walk from V&A East Storehouse. Here are five things you need to know! 

1. There are two free galleries exploring contemporary global culture  

At the heart of V&A East Museum will be two free permanent galleries, where you can see over 500 objects from the V&A’s collections spanning art, architecture, design, performance, and fashion.  

The galleries are called Why We Make and visitors can explore the most important issues in contemporary culture with displays revealing unexpected connections across time and creative discipline. 

Left: Copy after self-portrait miniature by Sofonisba Anguissola, oil on copper, unrecorded painter possibly from Sofonisba Anguissola’s circle, Italy, about 1530–1620. Middle: Daria dress, hand-smocked nylon tulle, Molly Goddard, London, 2019. Right: Urania (portrait of Lubaina Himid), from the series ‘Zabat’, UK, dye destruction print  Maud Sulter, UK 1989 © DACS/Maud Sulter Estate

Learn more about how we visualise our place in the world with Molly Goddard’s iconic 2020 Daria dress (as worn by Beyonce) alongside a copy of a 16th century self-portrait by Italian painter Sofinsba Anguilssola and Maud Sulter’s 1988 photographic portrait of Lubaina Himid. Or discover stories of trailblazing creatives, like a 17th Century gown by east London textile designer Anna Maria Garthwaite shown next to a 1990 Cut, Slash & Pull ensemble by Vivienne Westwood, as well as Althea McNish’s pioneering fabric designs, which were inspired by her African Caribbean heritage. Other topics include wellbeing, creative communities, social justice and environmental action.