The David Bowie Centre has opened its doors in London, unveiling Bowie’s vast archive—comprising more than 90,000 items—as a public, living experience space for the very first time.

David Bowie’s creativity never existed within a single discipline or form. Constantly in motion, his work flowed between music, performance, fashion, cinema, and writing. That restless, multifaceted production now comes together in its full scope in a public setting for the first time anywhere in the world. Located within the V&A East Storehouse in London, the David Bowie Centre presents Bowie’s personal archive on an unprecedented scale, offering visitors direct access to the processes behind one of the most influential creative figures of the modern era.

David Bowie Centre: The Creative Legacy of a Phenomenon
Photo: David Parry, Pa Media Assignments

This is not a museum in the conventional sense, nor is it a retrospective that simply looks back on Bowie’s past. The David Bowie Centre functions as a living archive—a space that continues to unfold, to be explored, and to pose new questions. Rather than fixing Bowie’s legacy in place, it keeps it active and open-ended.

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How Does an Archive Become an Experience?

The centre houses over 90,000 objects belonging to Bowie: costumes, musical instruments, stage designs, handwritten lyrics, notebooks, sketches, digital works, and personal documents. Yet this immense collection is not merely preserved behind glass. Instead, it is made actively accessible to visitors, encouraging engagement rather than passive observation.

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