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STORIES OF HOME
Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
FREE TICKETS
Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm (last entry 4pm) We are open on Bank Holiday Mondays. We are closed on 25 and 26 December and 1 January. Book your free tickets now. Gardens Through Time. Open all year round. Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm or dusk, whichever is earlier. THE STORY OF THE MUSEUM 1940s: Keep calm and carry on. The Museum remained open throughout WWII, closing for just a few months for air raid shelters to be built. The shelter dug into Kingsland Gardens held up to 700 people. Over the years the Museum evolved, presenting paintings, furniture and decorated arts in the context of living rooms. MUSEUM OF THE HOME COLLECTIONS If you leave all other fields blank this will allow you to browse an entire collection. This is a contemporary collection of photography, audio and testimony. It records everyday experiences of home. People have shared their past and present homes from the 1900s up to the present day. Documenting Homes records are a collection withinobjects.
EMMA DESCRIBES HER EXPERIENCE OF HOME LIFE UNDER LOCKDOWN Upsetting and dystopian. Emma's contribution to our Stay Home collecting project. 15/05/2020. We live in Exeter in Devon. We moved from east London five years ago. We have two children aged 6 and 9. We live in a three bedroom semi-detached property close to the city centre, dating from 1975. Although it was in a dilapidated state whenwe bought
EXPANDED BUILDINGS
CHANGING NATURE OF URBAN GARDENS Knot garden. Designed to be seen from above. Knot gardens are arranged in a square frame with a formal symmetrical design. They were first created in the 1550s, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Evergreen hedging is planted in patterns found on carvings and embroidery. Original designs for knot gardens were inspired by Renaissancepatterns
UNDER THE FLOORS
This oval-shaped piece of ceramic was found in the soil between the almshouse buildings and Cremer Street. It is painted blue and white, carved with a crown. It has the letters GR with laurel leaves and a cross. The G stands for George, R stands for Rex, which is King in Latin. We think it might be the decoration from a chamber pot. ABOUT THE MUSEUM'S PRIORITIES FOR ANTI-RACISM AND EQUITY We are committed to continuing to develop our programming and policies on anti-racism and equity, both in terms of curation and the Museum's own staff, Board and creative partners. These are our priorities: We will share more diverse and representative stories of home throughoutthe Museum.
SHOP FROM THE MUSEUM OF THE HOME Sow a Seed at the Museum of the Home. Sponsor wildflowers on the green roof. Regular price. £10.00. Sponsor a herb plant. Regular price. £25.00. Sponsor a fruit tree. Regular price.STORIES OF HOME
Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
FREE TICKETS
Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm (last entry 4pm) We are open on Bank Holiday Mondays. We are closed on 25 and 26 December and 1 January. Book your free tickets now. Gardens Through Time. Open all year round. Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm or dusk, whichever is earlier. THE STORY OF THE MUSEUM 1940s: Keep calm and carry on. The Museum remained open throughout WWII, closing for just a few months for air raid shelters to be built. The shelter dug into Kingsland Gardens held up to 700 people. Over the years the Museum evolved, presenting paintings, furniture and decorated arts in the context of living rooms. MUSEUM OF THE HOME COLLECTIONS If you leave all other fields blank this will allow you to browse an entire collection. This is a contemporary collection of photography, audio and testimony. It records everyday experiences of home. People have shared their past and present homes from the 1900s up to the present day. Documenting Homes records are a collection withinobjects.
EMMA DESCRIBES HER EXPERIENCE OF HOME LIFE UNDER LOCKDOWN Upsetting and dystopian. Emma's contribution to our Stay Home collecting project. 15/05/2020. We live in Exeter in Devon. We moved from east London five years ago. We have two children aged 6 and 9. We live in a three bedroom semi-detached property close to the city centre, dating from 1975. Although it was in a dilapidated state whenwe bought
EXPANDED BUILDINGS
CHANGING NATURE OF URBAN GARDENS Knot garden. Designed to be seen from above. Knot gardens are arranged in a square frame with a formal symmetrical design. They were first created in the 1550s, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Evergreen hedging is planted in patterns found on carvings and embroidery. Original designs for knot gardens were inspired by Renaissancepatterns
UNDER THE FLOORS
This oval-shaped piece of ceramic was found in the soil between the almshouse buildings and Cremer Street. It is painted blue and white, carved with a crown. It has the letters GR with laurel leaves and a cross. The G stands for George, R stands for Rex, which is King in Latin. We think it might be the decoration from a chamber pot. ABOUT THE MUSEUM'S PRIORITIES FOR ANTI-RACISM AND EQUITY We are committed to continuing to develop our programming and policies on anti-racism and equity, both in terms of curation and the Museum's own staff, Board and creative partners. These are our priorities: We will share more diverse and representative stories of home throughoutthe Museum.
SHOP FROM THE MUSEUM OF THE HOME Sow a Seed at the Museum of the Home. Sponsor wildflowers on the green roof. Regular price. £10.00. Sponsor a herb plant. Regular price. £25.00. Sponsor a fruit tree. Regular price.HOME GALLERIES
The word home has many meanings. It can be the physical space we live in or a feeling that goes beyond a specific time or place. In the Home Galleries we will explore the concept of home through people’s everyday experiences of making, keeping and being at home over thelast 400 years.
HOME IS MORE THAN A HOUSE Our flat! Christmas 1911. In 1911, Isa Gibson and her friend Peggy shared a flat in London. This small album of photographs is a record of the two young professionals as they made their home together in thecity.
WHO WE ARE AND HOW WE WANT TO BE SEEN Tea service, 1876. This mass-produced tea service capitalises on the popularity of artistic design and its association with Japanese style. Blue and white china with Japanese design motifs, such as bamboo stalks, fans, scrolls and geometric shapes, was an essential elementof the artistic
EXPANDED BUILDINGS
Expanded buildings and new spaces. The renovation of the original Grade 1 listed almshouses and the development of new spaces, masterminded by Wright & Wright Architects, will create 80% more space for exhibitions, events and collections. Illustration of the new entrance opposite Hoxton Overground Station.CONCEPTS OF HOME
The word home has many meanings. It can be the physical space we live in or a feeling that goes beyond a specific time or place. In the Home Galleries we will explore the concept of home through people’s everyday experiences of making, keeping and being at home over thelast 400 years.
ROOMS THROUGH TIME
Rooms Through Time. See some of the ways in which homes and home life have evolved in the past 400 years. The main living space of the home has been many things – a bustling hall, a formal parlour, a cosy living room. Our Rooms Through Time are based on real London homes and their owners would have had enough money to decorate and live GALLERIES AND GARDENS Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
EMMA DESCRIBES HER EXPERIENCE OF HOME LIFE UNDER LOCKDOWN Upsetting and dystopian. Emma's contribution to our Stay Home collecting project. 15/05/2020. We live in Exeter in Devon. We moved from east London five years ago. We have two children aged 6 and 9. We live in a three bedroom semi-detached property close to the city centre, dating from 1975. Although it was in a dilapidated state whenwe bought
HOME TRUTHS: WHO'S HOLDING THE BABY? Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
SOLACE AND COMFORT
In 2007, photographer Sophie Verhagen met a group of Hackney elders through a gardening project managed by Anchor Trust. The people she photographed found great solace and comfort in their gardens, but struggled to maintain them in old age.STORIES OF HOME
Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
FREE TICKETS
Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm (last entry 4pm) We are open on Bank Holiday Mondays. We are closed on 25 and 26 December and 1 January. Book your free tickets now. Gardens Through Time. Open all year round. Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm or dusk, whichever is earlier. THE STORY OF THE MUSEUM 1940s: Keep calm and carry on. The Museum remained open throughout WWII, closing for just a few months for air raid shelters to be built. The shelter dug into Kingsland Gardens held up to 700 people. Over the years the Museum evolved, presenting paintings, furniture and decorated arts in the context of living rooms. VIDEO CALL BACKGROUNDS Use our downloadable backgrounds to rejuvenate your video calls. These images show our Rooms Through Time as they were before the Museum closed for redevelopment. For reopening we're giving the rooms a refresh and bringing them to life with the stories of people who would have lived in similar homes. All the images are mirrored and ready forFACE COVERING
We are doing everything we can to help keep our visitors and staff safe. Masks / face coverings. Please wear a mask or face covering unless you have a reason you cannot do this (children under 11 areexempt).
MUSEUM OF THE HOME COLLECTIONS If you leave all other fields blank this will allow you to browse an entire collection. This is a contemporary collection of photography, audio and testimony. It records everyday experiences of home. People have shared their past and present homes from the 1900s up to the present day. Documenting Homes records are a collection withinobjects.
STORIES OF HOME
Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
FREE TICKETS
Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm (last entry 4pm) We are open on Bank Holiday Mondays. We are closed on 25 and 26 December and 1 January. Book your free tickets now. Gardens Through Time. Open all year round. Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm or dusk, whichever is earlier. THE STORY OF THE MUSEUM 1940s: Keep calm and carry on. The Museum remained open throughout WWII, closing for just a few months for air raid shelters to be built. The shelter dug into Kingsland Gardens held up to 700 people. Over the years the Museum evolved, presenting paintings, furniture and decorated arts in the context of living rooms. VIDEO CALL BACKGROUNDS Use our downloadable backgrounds to rejuvenate your video calls. These images show our Rooms Through Time as they were before the Museum closed for redevelopment. For reopening we're giving the rooms a refresh and bringing them to life with the stories of people who would have lived in similar homes. All the images are mirrored and ready forFACE COVERING
We are doing everything we can to help keep our visitors and staff safe. Masks / face coverings. Please wear a mask or face covering unless you have a reason you cannot do this (children under 11 areexempt).
MUSEUM OF THE HOME COLLECTIONS If you leave all other fields blank this will allow you to browse an entire collection. This is a contemporary collection of photography, audio and testimony. It records everyday experiences of home. People have shared their past and present homes from the 1900s up to the present day. Documenting Homes records are a collection withinobjects.
HOME GALLERIES
The word home has many meanings. It can be the physical space we live in or a feeling that goes beyond a specific time or place. In the Home Galleries we will explore the concept of home through people’s everyday experiences of making, keeping and being at home over thelast 400 years.
HOME IS MORE THAN A HOUSE Our flat! Christmas 1911. In 1911, Isa Gibson and her friend Peggy shared a flat in London. This small album of photographs is a record of the two young professionals as they made their home together in thecity.
WHO WE ARE AND HOW WE WANT TO BE SEEN Tea service, 1876. This mass-produced tea service capitalises on the popularity of artistic design and its association with Japanese style. Blue and white china with Japanese design motifs, such as bamboo stalks, fans, scrolls and geometric shapes, was an essential elementof the artistic
CONCEPTS OF HOME
The word home has many meanings. It can be the physical space we live in or a feeling that goes beyond a specific time or place. In the Home Galleries we will explore the concept of home through people’s everyday experiences of making, keeping and being at home over thelast 400 years.
FACE COVERING
We are doing everything we can to help keep our visitors and staff safe. Masks / face coverings. Please wear a mask or face covering unless you have a reason you cannot do this (children under 11 areexempt).
EXPANDED BUILDINGS
Expanded buildings and new spaces. The renovation of the original Grade 1 listed almshouses and the development of new spaces, masterminded by Wright & Wright Architects, will create 80% more space for exhibitions, events and collections. Illustration of the new entrance opposite Hoxton Overground Station. HOME TRUTHS: WHO'S HOLDING THE BABY? Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
GALLERIES AND GARDENS Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
EMMA DESCRIBES HER EXPERIENCE OF HOME LIFE UNDER LOCKDOWN Upsetting and dystopian. Emma's contribution to our Stay Home collecting project. 15/05/2020. We live in Exeter in Devon. We moved from east London five years ago. We have two children aged 6 and 9. We live in a three bedroom semi-detached property close to the city centre, dating from 1975. Although it was in a dilapidated state whenwe bought
SOLACE AND COMFORT
In 2007, photographer Sophie Verhagen met a group of Hackney elders through a gardening project managed by Anchor Trust. The people she photographed found great solace and comfort in their gardens, but struggled to maintain them in old age.STORIES OF HOME
Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
FREE TICKETS
Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm (last entry 4pm) We are open on Bank Holiday Mondays. We are closed on 25 and 26 December and 1 January. Book your free tickets now. Gardens Through Time. Open all year round. Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm or dusk, whichever is earlier. THE STORY OF THE MUSEUM 1940s: Keep calm and carry on. The Museum remained open throughout WWII, closing for just a few months for air raid shelters to be built. The shelter dug into Kingsland Gardens held up to 700 people. Over the years the Museum evolved, presenting paintings, furniture and decorated arts in the context of living rooms.FACE COVERING
We are doing everything we can to help keep our visitors and staff safe. Masks / face coverings. Please wear a mask or face covering unless you have a reason you cannot do EMMA DESCRIBES HER EXPERIENCE OF HOME LIFE UNDER LOCKDOWN Upsetting and dystopian. Emma's contribution to our Stay Home collecting project. 15/05/2020. We live in Exeter in Devon. We moved from east London five years ago. We have two children aged 6 and 9. We live in a three bedroom semi-detached property close to the city centre, dating from 1975. Although it was in a dilapidated state whenwe bought
VIDEO CALL BACKGROUNDS Use our downloadable backgrounds to rejuvenate your video calls. These images show our Rooms Through Time as they were before the Museum closed for redevelopment. For reopening we're giving the rooms a refresh and bringing them to life with the stories of people who would have lived in similar homes. All the images are mirrored and ready forSTORIES OF HOME
Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
FREE TICKETS
Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm (last entry 4pm) We are open on Bank Holiday Mondays. We are closed on 25 and 26 December and 1 January. Book your free tickets now. Gardens Through Time. Open all year round. Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm or dusk, whichever is earlier. THE STORY OF THE MUSEUM 1940s: Keep calm and carry on. The Museum remained open throughout WWII, closing for just a few months for air raid shelters to be built. The shelter dug into Kingsland Gardens held up to 700 people. Over the years the Museum evolved, presenting paintings, furniture and decorated arts in the context of living rooms.FACE COVERING
We are doing everything we can to help keep our visitors and staff safe. Masks / face coverings. Please wear a mask or face covering unless you have a reason you cannot do EMMA DESCRIBES HER EXPERIENCE OF HOME LIFE UNDER LOCKDOWN Upsetting and dystopian. Emma's contribution to our Stay Home collecting project. 15/05/2020. We live in Exeter in Devon. We moved from east London five years ago. We have two children aged 6 and 9. We live in a three bedroom semi-detached property close to the city centre, dating from 1975. Although it was in a dilapidated state whenwe bought
VIDEO CALL BACKGROUNDS Use our downloadable backgrounds to rejuvenate your video calls. These images show our Rooms Through Time as they were before the Museum closed for redevelopment. For reopening we're giving the rooms a refresh and bringing them to life with the stories of people who would have lived in similar homes. All the images are mirrored and ready forFREE TICKETS
Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm (last entry 4pm) We are open on Bank Holiday Mondays. We are closed on 25 and 26 December and 1 January. Book your free tickets now. Gardens Through Time. Open all year round. Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm or dusk, whichever is earlier.STORIES OF HOME
Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes through time - asking you about home. Reopening in spring 2021. HOME IS MORE THAN A HOUSE Our flat! Christmas 1911. In 1911, Isa Gibson and her friend Peggy shared a flat in London. This small album of photographs is a record of the two young professionals as they made their home together in thecity.
WHO WE ARE AND HOW WE WANT TO BE SEEN Tea service, 1876. This mass-produced tea service capitalises on the popularity of artistic design and its association with Japanese style. Blue and white china with Japanese design motifs, such as bamboo stalks, fans, scrolls and geometric shapes, was an essential elementof the artistic
EXPANDED BUILDINGS
Expanded buildings and new spaces. The renovation of the original Grade 1 listed almshouses and the development of new spaces, masterminded by Wright & Wright Architects, will create 80% more space for exhibitions, events and collections. Illustration of the new entrance opposite Hoxton Overground Station.FACE COVERING
We are doing everything we can to help keep our visitors and staff safe. Masks / face coverings. Please wear a mask or face covering unless you have a reason you cannot do HOW OUR HOME LIVES ARE CHANGING DURING THE CORONAVIRUS Stay Home collecting project. During these extraordinary times, our homes have never been more important. We are documenting how our home lives are changing during the coronavirus pandemic. Read some stories here. This new national collecting project forms part of the Museum of the Home's extensive Documenting Homes archive. Share your experience.BEARERS OF HOME
Bearers of Home is a new artist commission by BLKBRD Collective. These five double-sided banners, set on the Kingsland Road lawns, are a statement: a commitment to Hackney, London and the world that we bear witness to the many voices that make a home, a community and asociety.
SOLACE AND COMFORT
In 2007, photographer Sophie Verhagen met a group of Hackney elders through a gardening project managed by Anchor Trust. The people she photographed found great solace and comfort in their gardens, but struggled to maintain them in old age. MUSEUM OF THE HOME COLLECTIONS View all turned off because more than 500 results. 514/2011-24.photograph
STORIES OF HOME
Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
FREE TICKETS
Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm (last entry 4pm) We are open on Bank Holiday Mondays. We are closed on 25 and 26 December and 1 January. Book your free tickets now. Gardens Through Time. Open all year round. Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm or dusk, whichever is earlier. THE STORY OF THE MUSEUM 1940s: Keep calm and carry on. The Museum remained open throughout WWII, closing for just a few months for air raid shelters to be built. The shelter dug into Kingsland Gardens held up to 700 people. Over the years the Museum evolved, presenting paintings, furniture and decorated arts in the context of living rooms.FACE COVERING
We are doing everything we can to help keep our visitors and staff safe. Masks / face coverings. Please wear a mask or face covering unless you have a reason you cannot do EMMA DESCRIBES HER EXPERIENCE OF HOME LIFE UNDER LOCKDOWN Upsetting and dystopian. Emma's contribution to our Stay Home collecting project. 15/05/2020. We live in Exeter in Devon. We moved from east London five years ago. We have two children aged 6 and 9. We live in a three bedroom semi-detached property close to the city centre, dating from 1975. Although it was in a dilapidated state whenwe bought
VIDEO CALL BACKGROUNDS Use our downloadable backgrounds to rejuvenate your video calls. These images show our Rooms Through Time as they were before the Museum closed for redevelopment. For reopening we're giving the rooms a refresh and bringing them to life with the stories of people who would have lived in similar homes. All the images are mirrored and ready forEXPANDED BUILDINGS
UNDER THE FLOORS
This oval-shaped piece of ceramic was found in the soil between the almshouse buildings and Cremer Street. It is painted blue and white, carved with a crown. It has the letters GR with laurel leaves and a cross. The G stands for George, R stands for Rex, which is King in Latin. We think it might be the decoration from a chamber pot. ABOUT THE MUSEUM'S PRIORITIES FOR ANTI-RACISM AND EQUITY We are committed to continuing to develop our programming and policies on anti-racism and equity, both in terms of curation and the Museum's own staff, Board and creative partners. These are our priorities: We will share more diverse and representative stories of home throughoutthe Museum.
CHANGING NATURE OF URBAN GARDENS Knot garden. Designed to be seen from above. Knot gardens are arranged in a square frame with a formal symmetrical design. They were first created in the 1550s, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Evergreen hedging is planted in patterns found on carvings and embroidery. Original designs for knot gardens were inspired by Renaissancepatterns
STORIES OF HOME
Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes throughtime - asking you
FREE TICKETS
Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm (last entry 4pm) We are open on Bank Holiday Mondays. We are closed on 25 and 26 December and 1 January. Book your free tickets now. Gardens Through Time. Open all year round. Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm or dusk, whichever is earlier. THE STORY OF THE MUSEUM 1940s: Keep calm and carry on. The Museum remained open throughout WWII, closing for just a few months for air raid shelters to be built. The shelter dug into Kingsland Gardens held up to 700 people. Over the years the Museum evolved, presenting paintings, furniture and decorated arts in the context of living rooms.FACE COVERING
We are doing everything we can to help keep our visitors and staff safe. Masks / face coverings. Please wear a mask or face covering unless you have a reason you cannot do EMMA DESCRIBES HER EXPERIENCE OF HOME LIFE UNDER LOCKDOWN Upsetting and dystopian. Emma's contribution to our Stay Home collecting project. 15/05/2020. We live in Exeter in Devon. We moved from east London five years ago. We have two children aged 6 and 9. We live in a three bedroom semi-detached property close to the city centre, dating from 1975. Although it was in a dilapidated state whenwe bought
VIDEO CALL BACKGROUNDS Use our downloadable backgrounds to rejuvenate your video calls. These images show our Rooms Through Time as they were before the Museum closed for redevelopment. For reopening we're giving the rooms a refresh and bringing them to life with the stories of people who would have lived in similar homes. All the images are mirrored and ready forEXPANDED BUILDINGS
UNDER THE FLOORS
This oval-shaped piece of ceramic was found in the soil between the almshouse buildings and Cremer Street. It is painted blue and white, carved with a crown. It has the letters GR with laurel leaves and a cross. The G stands for George, R stands for Rex, which is King in Latin. We think it might be the decoration from a chamber pot. ABOUT THE MUSEUM'S PRIORITIES FOR ANTI-RACISM AND EQUITY We are committed to continuing to develop our programming and policies on anti-racism and equity, both in terms of curation and the Museum's own staff, Board and creative partners. These are our priorities: We will share more diverse and representative stories of home throughoutthe Museum.
CHANGING NATURE OF URBAN GARDENS Knot garden. Designed to be seen from above. Knot gardens are arranged in a square frame with a formal symmetrical design. They were first created in the 1550s, during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. Evergreen hedging is planted in patterns found on carvings and embroidery. Original designs for knot gardens were inspired by Renaissancepatterns
FREE TICKETS
Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm (last entry 4pm) We are open on Bank Holiday Mondays. We are closed on 25 and 26 December and 1 January. Book your free tickets now. Gardens Through Time. Open all year round. Tuesday – Sunday. 10am–5pm or dusk, whichever is earlier.STORIES OF HOME
Visitor and event information for the Museum of the Home, previously the Geffrye Museum. Sharing stories of home - showing homes through time - asking you about home. Reopening in spring 2021. HOME IS MORE THAN A HOUSE Our flat! Christmas 1911. In 1911, Isa Gibson and her friend Peggy shared a flat in London. This small album of photographs is a record of the two young professionals as they made their home together in thecity.
WHO WE ARE AND HOW WE WANT TO BE SEEN Tea service, 1876. This mass-produced tea service capitalises on the popularity of artistic design and its association with Japanese style. Blue and white china with Japanese design motifs, such as bamboo stalks, fans, scrolls and geometric shapes, was an essential elementof the artistic
EXPANDED BUILDINGS
Expanded buildings and new spaces. The renovation of the original Grade 1 listed almshouses and the development of new spaces, masterminded by Wright & Wright Architects, will create 80% more space for exhibitions, events and collections. Illustration of the new entrance opposite Hoxton Overground Station.FACE COVERING
We are doing everything we can to help keep our visitors and staff safe. Masks / face coverings. Please wear a mask or face covering unless you have a reason you cannot do HOW OUR HOME LIVES ARE CHANGING DURING THE CORONAVIRUS Stay Home collecting project. During these extraordinary times, our homes have never been more important. We are documenting how our home lives are changing during the coronavirus pandemic. Read some stories here. This new national collecting project forms part of the Museum of the Home's extensive Documenting Homes archive. Share your experience.BEARERS OF HOME
Bearers of Home is a new artist commission by BLKBRD Collective. These five double-sided banners, set on the Kingsland Road lawns, are a statement: a commitment to Hackney, London and the world that we bear witness to the many voices that make a home, a community and asociety.
SOLACE AND COMFORT
In 2007, photographer Sophie Verhagen met a group of Hackney elders through a gardening project managed by Anchor Trust. The people she photographed found great solace and comfort in their gardens, but struggled to maintain them in old age. MUSEUM OF THE HOME COLLECTIONS View all turned off because more than 500 results. 514/2011-24.photograph
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REOPENING SOON!
WE'RE REOPENING ON SATURDAY 12 JUNE, IN LINE WITH GOVERNMENT GUIDANCE. Entry is free but for now all visitors need to book a timed ticket inadvance.
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YOUR VISIT
NEW GALLERIES AND NEW STORIESNEW HOME GALLERIES
Exploring home through people’s everyday experiences of making, keeping and being at homeHome Galleries
REFRESHED ROOMS THROUGH TIME Room settings which display some of the ways in which homes have evolved in the past 400 yearsRooms Through Time
NEWLY PLANTED GARDENS Our Gardens Through Time show how city gardens have developed over thecenturies
Gardens Through TimeWHAT'S ON
HOLDING THE BABY
Polly Braden's photos celebrate the strength and resilience of single parent families facing austerity About the exhibitionBEARERS OF HOME
A new artist commission by BLKBRD Collective that bears witness to the many voices that make a homeBearers of Home
MOLLSPEAK
An ever changing composition of word and sound by writer Maria Fusco About the sound installation WAITING FOR MYSELF TO APPEAR A new film commission by Michael McMillanAbout the film
HOME LIVES UNDER LOCKDOWN Read more Stay Home storiesExperience
REDISCOVERED MY TALENTS Chantelle Leanne's contribution to Stay HomeExperience
THE NAGS HEAD
Susannah's contribution to Stay HomeExperience
MANY, MANY STARS
Phil's contribution to Stay HomeExperience
SCRUBS, WASHING, IRONING Judith's contribution to Stay HomeGET INVOLVED
SHARE YOUR EXPERIENCE We're documenting how home lives are changing during the Covid-19pandemic
About the project
BEHIND THE DOOR
Our campaign with London Homeless Collective aiming to tackle femalehomelessness
About the campaign
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This cookie name is associated with Google Universal Analytics - which is a significant update to Google's more commonly used analytics service. This cookie is used to distinguish unique users by assigning a randomly generated number as a client identifier. It is included in each page request in a site and used to calculate visitor, session and campaign data for the sites analytics reports._gid
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