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If You See One Exhibition This Season, Make It Tim Walker: Wonderful Things

V&A Tim Walker Wonderful Things Exhibition Installation View (c) Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Tim Walker: Wonderful Things invites visitors into the fantastical imagination of one of the world’s most inventive photographers and is the largest retrospective of Walker’s work to date. There are 10 new projects woven through the exhibition, where he has drawn upon the V&A’s vast collection for inspiration, with the helping hands of many of the museum’s curators, conservators and technicians.
 
The photographer scoured the V&As 145 public galleries and explored the labyrinth of Victorian passages below ground level, encountering stain glass windows, vivid Indian paintings, jewelled snuffboxes, erotic illustrations and large-scale tapestries to arouse new ideas. Here are some of the highlights to enjoy whilst journeying through Walker’s enchanting body of work.

“Tim has a wildly inquisitive mind and boundless energy, he never stops innovating and these new pictures are some of the most spectacular he has ever made.” Shona Heath, Exhibition Designer

Tim Walker: Wonderful Things Exhibition Installation View, Illuminations, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Tim Walker: Wonderful Things Exhibition Installation View, Illuminations, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Tim Walker: Wonderful-Things, Exhibition Installation View Retrospective Section c, Victoria and Albert Museum London.

Fashion stories and famous portraits

 
The first room of the exhibition displays inventive fashion editorials alongside portraits of luminaries such as Sir David Attenborough, Margaret Atwood, Peter Blake and David Hockney, as well as a constellation of performers including Cate Blanchett, Daniel-Day Lewis, Saoirse Ronan and Solange Knowles – just to name a few. A whole wall is devoted to Walker’s muses too, from Tilda Swinton and Lindsay Kemp to Kristen McMenamy and Kate Moss.

Tim Walker: Wonderful-Things, Exhibition Installation View Retrospective Section c, Victoria and Albert Museum London.

Tim Walker, Cloud 9, Radhika Nair,
Fashion: Halpern and Dolce & Gabbana
Pershore, Worcestershire, 2018, © Tim Walker Studio

Cloud 9

 
In perhaps what is the most colourful room of the whole exhibition, Cloud 9 was inspired by the V&A’s historical paintings from South Asia and celebrates the region’s vibrancy through photographs swathed in colour. The images were shot in the Worcestershire delphinium fields during a heatwave and Shona Heath’s installations and set design convey the Eastern mysticism perfectly.

Tim Walker: Wonderful Things Exhibition Installation View, Handle with Care, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Handle with care

 
The next room is inspired by the work of the V&As textile conservators, who look after and preserve the museum’s world-leading fashion and textiles collection. Pictures of Karen Elson, James Crewe and Sgaire Wood are displayed alongside a dress from Alexander McQueen’s 2009 collection, which Walker came across at the V&A Clothworkers’ centre wrapped up, describing it as a “beautiful ghost.”

Tim Walker: Wonderful Things Exhibition Installation View, Handle with Care, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Karen Elson, Sgaire Wood and James Crewe, Tim Walker, London 2018, Tim Walker Studio

Tim Walker, Box of Delights, James Spencer, London 2018 © Tim Walker Studio

Box of delights

 
Inspired by a 1675 embroidered casket that Walker found in the V&A, Box of Delights hints at fantasy, transformation and a world where you can be yourself. The photoshoot revolves around James Spencer, who burst out of his family home dressed as a beautiful woman. Walker explains that he was inspired by the London club scene and its freedom of expression.

Tim Walker: Wonderful Things Exhibition Installation View, Soldiers of Tomorrow, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Soldiers of Tomorrow

 
Walker discovered a photo of the Bayeux Tapestry in the V&A that measured 65 metres long – the biggest photograph he had ever seen. This piece tells the story of the events leading up to the Battle of Hastings and when creating his own photographs, Walker wanted to recreate not just the violence, but the fine detail, texture and colour of the old tapestry. The images depict its chaos and beauty using recycled materials.

Tim Walker: Wonderful Things Exhibition Installation View, Soldiers of Tomorrow, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

“As the fashion industry can be wasteful and polluting, I liked the idea of everything being recycled, homemade and hand-knitted for this shoot. The figures are eco-warriors, the soldiers of tomorrow.” - Tim Walker

Tim Walker, Lil Dragon, Ling Ling and the Dragon.
Fashion: Marta Hermosillo Lopez and Eelko, London, 2018.

Lil Dragon

 
After discovering the V&A’s collection of snuffboxes – in particular one featuring a dragon – Walker reimagined an empress walking her pet dragon by night for this series of images. Set designer Shona Heath was inspired by the rainbows within the shells on the snuffboxes and suggested using UV on the photographs, adding a unique twist to the Lil Dragon room.

Tim Walker: Wonderful Things, Exhibition Installation View, Why Not Be Oneself, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Why not be oneself?

 
Towards the end of the exhibition, Walker portrays Tilda Swinton as the poet Dame Edith Sitwell in a celebration of age and individuality. Her flamboyant wardrobe included flowing brocade robes, velvet gowns, turbans and golden shoes and as a distant relative of the Dame, Tilda was the perfect choice to inhabit Renishaw Hall.

Tim Walker: Wonderful Things, Exhibition Installation View, Why Not Be Oneself, © Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Tim Walker, Tilda Swinton, Renishaw Hall Derbyshire, 2018

“For me, beauty is everything. I’m interested in breaking down the boundaries that society has created, to enable more varied types of beauty and the wonderful diversity of humanity to be celebrated. Preparing for this exhibition over the past three years has pushed me into new territories, which is very exciting, and I’m at a stage in my life where I feel brave enough to do that.” Tim Walker

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