Museum of the Home’s displays will change to reflect changing times

This article was first published by the Art Newspaper.

The 20th-century displays in the London institution’s Rooms Through Time galleries are being overhauled to reflect the diverse communities of Hoxton, the historic core of east London and one of the UK’s most gentrified areas

When The Rooms Through Time reopen next summer, they will be transformed to better reflect the setting of the museum in a vibrant, multicultural district of London, where Bengali, Afro-Carribean, Irish and other originally immigrant communities, artists, craft workers and students are just about withstanding the onslaught of developers.

The Rooms Through Time began when the almshouses were converted into a museum in 1914 with a collection of furniture intended to inspire good craftsmanship. The original rooms are a suite of spaces in the Georgian buildings dressed as domestic interiors across four centuries. But the rooms now being dismantled are the most recent, created in the 1990s extension. “They’ve now been there for more than 20 years and they are looking a bit old—and not in a good way,” says the museum’s curator Louis Platman.

From Jacobean to Edwardian, the rooms are full of fine furniture, textiles, silver, porcelain and glass. But, across the centuries, they have one thing in common and one common problem: they are overwhelmingly white and middle class, Platman says. 

@UK_ICOM