The exhibition marks the first time the influential V&A has turned its attention to exploring the topic of the future.
The minds behind the exhibition are Rory Hyde, the V&A's curator of contemporary architecture and urbanism, and Mariana Pestana, an independent curator, architect and co-founder of design studio The Decorators. The two readily admit the future is impossible to foresee with any precision, even for two people who have given it months of thought.
Instead, their exhibition focuses on objects that suggest future technological frontiers, ways of living and public debates, some of them contradictory. The curators found guidance in a quote by cultural theorist Paul Virilio: "The invention of the ship was also the invention of the shipwreck."
"It means with each new invention, with each technology, with each design idea, comes contained within it good futures and bad futures," Hyde told Dezeen. "That's why we have the title The Future Starts Here — we're looking at beginnings."
See the review here
At the Victoria & Albert Museum, London, until 4 November.
