Exhibitions
David Bowie is

A blockbuster exhibition travelling the world has become a record of the life of a cultural icon


The David Bowie retrospective at Groninger Museum in Groningen, the Netherlands, took on a new meaning after the death of the singer on 10 January. Tickets sold out as fans flocked to the museum to pay tribute to the star, with the museum opening its doors on the day of Bowie’s death to grieving fans and adding a condolence book for visitors to sign. The museum sold more than 30,000 tickets the following week. The blockbuster exhibition, David Bowie is, has been seen by 1.3 million people worldwide since it first opened at London’s Victoria & Albert Museum in 2013. It heads to Japan in 2017.

WRITTEN IN THE STARS

Bowie has been honoured with his own asterism of stars.

Belgian radio station Studio Brussels and astronomers from the MIRA public observatory decided to develop a unique tribute to space-loving Bowie. A lightning-bolt shape was picked out of the skies to create an asterism – an arrangement of stars that when joined up sketches Bowie’s trademark sign.

“We decided that this iconic shape, from the cover of his Aladdin Sane album, should symbolically perpetuate in the stars close to Mars,” said observatory employee Phillip Mollet. “None of this is official, it’s just a very symbolic tribute to a great artist.”

Astronomers should locate the stars Sigma Librae, Spica, Alpha Virginis, Zeta Centauri, SAA 204 132, and the Beta Sigma Octantis Trianguli Australis.

Visit http://stardustforbowie.be/

 


PHOTO: Sukita / The David Bowie Archive 2012

Bowie has been honoured with his own asterism of stars.
Bowie at the V&A

When David Bowie is debuted at the V&A in London in 2013, it was a groundbreaking exhibition, featuring cutting-edge multimedia technology as well as 300 objects from the artist’s archive.

Created by V&A theatre and performance curators Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh, the retrospective reflected five decades of the artist’s reinvention and evolution.

The technology included 7-metre-high (23-foot) video walls and multiple screens displaying carefully orchestrated stills, animations, graphics, video, sound and live feeds. Visitors were able to immerse themselves in soundscapes thanks to a 3D audio system provided by Sennheiser.

The digital part of the collection was offset by posed mannequins dressed in costumes from the Bowie archive, and video projection of live performances.
The physical archive also included handwritten lyrics, photography, set designs, album artwork, instruments and rare performance material, demonstrating Bowie’s influence beyond music – on art and design, film, theatre and popular culture.

Following the runaway success of the V&A exhibition, David Bowie is went on tour to Toronto, Canada; Sao Paulo, Brazil; Berlin; Chicago, Illinois; Paris; Melbourne, Australia and Groningen in the Netherlands – and will head to Japan in 2017.

 


The David Bowie Archive / v&a Museum London

Mannequins dressed in Bowie’s costumes at the V&A London. The groundbreaking exhibition is currently on the road
 


The David Bowie Archive 2012 / V&A IMAGES
With William Burroughs in a 1974 photo by Terry O’Neill
 
A view of the Groningen Museum. After Bowie died, fans visited the exhibit to pay tribute to the singer Credit: PHOTO : MARTEN DE LEEUW
Groninger Museum has a reputation for avant-garde exhibits Credit: PHOTO: Sukita / The David Bowie Archive 2012
David Bowie is will leave the Groninger Museum in April 2016, after an extended run of four weeks
Bowie during the Aladdin Sane album cover shoot in 1973, photographed by Brian Duffy Credit: © The David Bowie Archive / Duffy Archive ltd
 


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SELECTED ISSUE
Attractions Management
2016 issue 1

View issue contents

Leisure Management - David Bowie is

Exhibitions

David Bowie is


A blockbuster exhibition travelling the world has become a record of the life of a cultural icon

In this 1973 photograph, fashion icon David Bowie wears a striped bodysuit – a Kansai Yamamoto design PHOTO: Sukita / The David Bowie Archive 2012
A view of the Groningen Museum. After Bowie died, fans visited the exhibit to pay tribute to the singer PHOTO : MARTEN DE LEEUW
Groninger Museum has a reputation for avant-garde exhibits PHOTO: Sukita / The David Bowie Archive 2012
David Bowie is will leave the Groninger Museum in April 2016, after an extended run of four weeks
Bowie during the Aladdin Sane album cover shoot in 1973, photographed by Brian Duffy © The David Bowie Archive / Duffy Archive ltd

The David Bowie retrospective at Groninger Museum in Groningen, the Netherlands, took on a new meaning after the death of the singer on 10 January. Tickets sold out as fans flocked to the museum to pay tribute to the star, with the museum opening its doors on the day of Bowie’s death to grieving fans and adding a condolence book for visitors to sign. The museum sold more than 30,000 tickets the following week. The blockbuster exhibition, David Bowie is, has been seen by 1.3 million people worldwide since it first opened at London’s Victoria & Albert Museum in 2013. It heads to Japan in 2017.

WRITTEN IN THE STARS

Bowie has been honoured with his own asterism of stars.

Belgian radio station Studio Brussels and astronomers from the MIRA public observatory decided to develop a unique tribute to space-loving Bowie. A lightning-bolt shape was picked out of the skies to create an asterism – an arrangement of stars that when joined up sketches Bowie’s trademark sign.

“We decided that this iconic shape, from the cover of his Aladdin Sane album, should symbolically perpetuate in the stars close to Mars,” said observatory employee Phillip Mollet. “None of this is official, it’s just a very symbolic tribute to a great artist.”

Astronomers should locate the stars Sigma Librae, Spica, Alpha Virginis, Zeta Centauri, SAA 204 132, and the Beta Sigma Octantis Trianguli Australis.

Visit http://stardustforbowie.be/

 


PHOTO: Sukita / The David Bowie Archive 2012

Bowie has been honoured with his own asterism of stars.
Bowie at the V&A

When David Bowie is debuted at the V&A in London in 2013, it was a groundbreaking exhibition, featuring cutting-edge multimedia technology as well as 300 objects from the artist’s archive.

Created by V&A theatre and performance curators Victoria Broackes and Geoffrey Marsh, the retrospective reflected five decades of the artist’s reinvention and evolution.

The technology included 7-metre-high (23-foot) video walls and multiple screens displaying carefully orchestrated stills, animations, graphics, video, sound and live feeds. Visitors were able to immerse themselves in soundscapes thanks to a 3D audio system provided by Sennheiser.

The digital part of the collection was offset by posed mannequins dressed in costumes from the Bowie archive, and video projection of live performances.
The physical archive also included handwritten lyrics, photography, set designs, album artwork, instruments and rare performance material, demonstrating Bowie’s influence beyond music – on art and design, film, theatre and popular culture.

Following the runaway success of the V&A exhibition, David Bowie is went on tour to Toronto, Canada; Sao Paulo, Brazil; Berlin; Chicago, Illinois; Paris; Melbourne, Australia and Groningen in the Netherlands – and will head to Japan in 2017.

 


The David Bowie Archive / v&a Museum London

Mannequins dressed in Bowie’s costumes at the V&A London. The groundbreaking exhibition is currently on the road
 


The David Bowie Archive 2012 / V&A IMAGES
With William Burroughs in a 1974 photo by Terry O’Neill
 

Originally published in Attractions Management 2016 issue 1

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