The royal has curated her own “mini display”, celebrating past makers and creators

Last month, the Princess of Wales paid a visit to the Victoria & Albert Museum’s new east London outpost, V&A East Storehouse. It’s an enormous space – bigger than 30 basketball courts – across four levels, designed to be an immersive experience to expose visitors to more than 250,000 objects, 350,000 library books and 1,000 archives from the V&A’s collections. As it turns out, Kate wasn’t just visiting in her capacity as the V&A Royal Patron; she has turned her hand to curation, selecting a variety of objects from the museum’s vast collection in order to create a new exhibition.
Makes and Creators is described as a “mini display”, consisting of a number of items chosen by the princess in conjunction with the V&A’s curatorial team. The intention is to celebrate past makers and creators, proving the influence of historic objects over all aspects of creativity today.


The selection includes a costume designed by Oliver Messel and worn by Diana Vere in The Royal Ballet’s 1960 production of The Sleeping Beauty; a watercolour painting by Beatrix Potter; a Morris & Co furnishing screen designed by William Morris’s assistant J.H.Dearle in the mid-1880s; and a Qing dynasty porcelain vase from Jingdezhen, China, circa. 1662-1722.
Perhaps most excitingly of all, the V&A’s new ‘Order an Object’ service means that anyone can book to access any object at V&A East Storehouse, for free, seven-days-a-week. According to a statement from the museum: “The Princess met with V&A East Storehouse’s new collections access team, who have been recruited locally to facilitate this access, and spent time viewing objects, including some of those featured in the final display.”
David Parry
The Princess of Wales chose a variety of objects for V&A East Storehouse’s new exhibition
The Makers and Creators display is one of more than 100 changing mini displays which will be on show at V&A East Storehouse. Said the V&A in a press release: “Her Royal Highness’ display shows how individual, unique objects can come together to create a collective whole that helps us to explore our social and cultural experiences, and the role we play in the wider tapestry of life.”