24 Hour Museum - official guide to UK museums, galleries, exhibitions and heritage
Gateway to Over 3,000 UK museums, galleries and heritage attractions
Skip to navigation

Exhibitions

The Museum Of Childhood Travels Back To The Space Age

By Anra Kennedy

23/11/2007

Image: a photo of two girls wearing space style costumes and looking at a museum display case filled with space themed dolls

© V&A Museum of Childhood

24 Hour Museum Head of Education, Anra Kennedy, takes her children on an exploration of space, showing at the V&A Museum of Childhood in Bethnal Green until April 6 2008.

Space adventures hadn’t been embraced by my three daughters thus far. Their play tended towards the practical, with games revolving around familiar and firmly terrestrial locations.

They thought Star Wars was for boys and Buzz Lightyear was frankly rather clunky. That’s all changed now. A couple of hours at the Museum of Childhood’s new Space Age, Exploration, Design and Popular Culture* exhibition and they’ve caught the space bug.

Mars is where it’s at, preferably whilst wearing a shiny, sequinned mini dress and accompanied by Buck Rogers and Robby the Robot.

Image: a photograph of a retro robot toy next to a robot dog toy

Robot toys from the 50s and 60s - a golden age for space toys. © V&A Museum of Childhood

From the strokable chunk of meteorite, 4.9 billion years old, to the futuristic lego scenes and the impressive range of ray guns, this exhibition really does have something for everyone. It explores the many ways in which space has invaded so much of our popular culture.

This is a show packed with stuff. Astronomical instruments, NASA space food, furniture and film posters vie for attention with astronaut Barbie and a host of TV merchandise. It’s visually so appealing that my girls were drawn in immediately, fascinated by flying saucers fifties-style and the many variations on the robot theme.

We examined a ‘urine collection device’ in detail (‘Mummy! It’s a giant space nappy!’) so now know exactly how you go the loo in space. We know too what happens if you’re sick in space, obviously a question of key concern when you’re seven.

Image: a photo of a golden dress on a mannequin

Mini-dress by by Leonard Joseph, 1968. © V&A Museum of Childhood

We’re still unsure as to why women in the fifties and sixties wore so few clothes whilst exploring new planets though, believing Pierre Cardin’s take on space fashion to be much more practical.

There’s just enough interactivity peppered through the exhibition. Space age dress-up clothes and a rocket-building exercise seemed to be going down very well with all the younger visitors. Most popular of all with my lot was the ‘Design a Space Age Room’ computer interactive.

These don’t overwhelm the objects though and the display encourages children to look and think instead of rushing to press the next button.

Image: a photo of three girls looking into a display case filled with a lunar landscape made out of lego

It's a Lego lunar landscape! © V&A Museum of Childhood

This exhibition’s a winner, with appeal for families and space fanatics alike. Once it leaves Bethnal Green on April 6 2007 it goes on a seven-venue tour around the UK, so catch it if you can.

In the meantime visit the Museum of Childhood's website for more information

V&A Museum of Childhood, London
V&A Museum of Childhood, Cambridge Heath Road, Bethnal Green, London, E2 9PA, England

Open: Daily 10.00-17.45
Closed: 25, 26 December and 1 January

Related Articles

London Photomonth Photography Festival Gets Underway
2008 Museums And Heritage Awards Announced In London
National Science And Engineering Week 2008 In UK Museums
Sweet Architecture At The V&A Museum Of Childhood
Margaret Hodge Opens Space Exhibition With Government Culture Pledge For Children
MGM 2007 - David Lammy Launches Museums & Galleries Month
News In Brief - Week Ending March 25 2007

E-news registration
E-mail story to a friend
Tell us what you think

Wildlife Photographer of the Year At Natural History Museum

Future 50 - Top Online Axis Artists In Leeds Exhibition

Yoko Ono Takes Her Love To Tyneside For BALTIC Show

Shetland Museum Unveils Evocative First World War Collection

Sisley In England And Wales At London's National Gallery

Darwin And His Big Idea At The Natural History Museum London

Babylon: Myth Or Reality? At The British Museum

The Hub's Guitars, Made In Britain, Played All Over The World

Interactive Map Explores Coastal Communities At Jaywick, Essex

The Post Office During WWI At The Cabinet War Rooms

St. Barbe Museum Hosts The Women's Land Army - A Portrait

Oliver Clegg's Night's Move At The Freud Museum London

New Walk Museum Hosts Ernest Gimson & The Arts And Craft Movement

Paths To Fame: Turner Watercolours From The Courtauld

National Portrait Gallery - Annie Leibovitz: A Photographer's Life

Disposable People - Slavery Exposed At Southbank Centre

Soho Of The 1950s And 1960s At Photographers' Gallery

Eileen Agar: An Eye For Collage At Pallant House Gallery

Search this site

Advanced Search
Map Search

Home Page
News Page
Exhibition Page
What's On
Trails Page
Website of the Week
Letters Page
Welsh Home
Graphical Version

Skip to body

Copyright © 24 Hour Museum
Information published here was believed to be correct at the time it was prepared. Welsh language pages developed with CYMAL: Museums Archives and Libraries Wales, funded by the Welsh Assembly Government.

Skip to navigation
Go to top