Ai Weiwei to take over the Design Museum with major exhibition and installations
Ai Weiwei: Making Sense will be the artist’s very first exhibition to focus on design and architecture, and will mix recent works with commissioned pieces, inviting us into a meditation on value and humanity, art and activism.

Ai Weiwei, one of the world’s most celebrated and recognisable living artists, is to open a major new exhibition at the Design Museum in April 2023.
Ai Weiwei: Making Sense will be the artist’s very first exhibition to focus on design and architecture, and will be his biggest UK show in eight years. The exhibition will feature works never shown before in the UK, as well as new pieces displayed for the very first time. There will be large- scale works installed outside of the exhibition gallery, in the museum’s free-to-enter spaces as well as outside the building.

Image: © Image courtesy Ai Weiwei Studio
Known around the world for his powerful art and activism, Ai Weiwei works across many disciplines: his practice emcompasses art, architecture, design, film, collecting and curating. In this exhibition, Ai uses design and the history of making as a lens through which to consider what we value.
At the heart of the exhibition will be a series of major site-specific installations. Hundreds of thousands of objects will be laid out on the floor of the gallery in a series of five expansive ‘fields’. These objects — from Stone Age tools to Lego bricks — have been collected together by Ai Weiwei since the 1990s, and are the result of his ongoing fascination with artefacts and traditional craftsmanship. These collection-based works have never been brought together before. Three of the fields have been created for this exhibition and will be seen for the very first time. The other two have never been seen in the UK before.

Image: Untitled (LEGO Incident). © Image courtesy Ai Weiwei Studio
Alongside the fields will be dozens of objects and artworks from throughout Ai Weiwei’s career that explore the tensions between past and present, hand and machine, precious and worthless, construction and destruction. His Han dynasty urn emblazoned with a Coca-Cola logo, which will be on show, epitomises these clashes. Location: 224-238 Kensington High Street, Kensington, London W8 6AG, Date: 7 April - 30 July 2023. Price: from £16.50/Concessions available.
Parquet flooring transforms dining rooms into sophisticated spaces that radiate timeless elegance. The intricate geometric patterns and premium wood materials create a foundation of luxury that elevates any dining experience.
Katrina Palmer, an artist known for exploring materiality, absence, and dislocation, recently spoke to us following her year-long residency at the National Gallery about her exhibition The Touch Report…
The British Pavilion at the 2025 Architecture Biennale in Venice will explore the role of architecture in addressing the legacy of colonial geological extraction through innovative, earth-based repair practices in a UK-Kenya collaboration…
Lola Young at O2 Forum Kentish Town · British Pie Week · Romeo and Juliet at The Royal Opera House · Weather Girl at Soho Theatre · Czech Philharmonic with Sheku Kanneh-Mason · Jasmin Vardimon: NOW at Sadler’s Wells East · Mitsuko Uchida · Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize 2025 · Jorge Jobim: Fantastical Autonomy · Siena: The Rise of Painting 1300‒1350· Art After Dark…
Leigh Bowery (1961-1994) packed more into his brief life than most would manage in two lifetimes. He passed away from an AIDS-related illness in 1994, at the age of just 33….
Claudia Pagès Rabal: Five Defence Towers · Tirzah Garwood: Beyond Ravilious · Heather Agyepong: Through Motion · Christina Kimeze · Citra Sasmita: Into Eternal Land · Mire Lee: Open Wound · Linder: Danger Came Smiling · Galli: So, So, So · Mickalene Thomas: All About Love …
For the first time in the UK, the Royal Academy of Arts will present an exhibition exploring the lasting influence of Vincent van Gogh on Anselm Kiefer Hon RA. Running from 28 June to 26 October 2025…
AllBright’s Step Forward Summit · Firebird & Friends with Savannah Hagendijk · Art Exhibitions Celebrating Female Artists · Art After Dark · Marylebone Village Celebrates Female Founders · International Women’s Day Dinner at CORD by Le Cordon Bleu · WOW at 15 with Angela Davis · Boxcar Bar & Grill x Sara Dongiovanni · International Women’s Day Art of Self-Connection Workshop…
Arments Pie and Mash · Holborn Dining Room at Rosewood London · The 411 · The Audley Public House · The Devonshire · St John · Three Cheers Pubs · The Georgian at Harrods · The Marksman · The Connaught Grill · Quo Vadis…
With 2025 already in full swing, many people are eyeing their calendars and searching for the best opportunities to visit London in the coming months…
London is beautiful all year round, but winter brings a special glow to the streets of London, so if you are someone who enjoys winter, it is safe to say a winter walk on the London streets is your go-to.
The British Council has announced that Lubaina Himid CBE RA will represent Great Britain at the 61st International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia in 2026…
The best way to spend a weekend is by taking a trip to the Big Smoke for recreation purposes. However, with so many venues to choose from…
From the lip-smacking cuisine of Michelin-starred restaurants to those members-only lounges - and some gorgeously classy casinos like The Ritz Club, the nightlife that London’s ultra-rich get to enjoy is nothing short of sheer opulence…
Marylebone Village to host a week of events championing female founders and entrepreneurs, including a panel discussion and fundraising for the Marylebone Project…
Buying or selling property can be an unpredictable journey. From fluctuating markets to unexpected legal challenges, there’s no guarantee that every deal will go smoothly…