The exhibition, titled Rebel – Storyteller – Visionary, is now on display at The Bowes Museum from March 28th to September 6th, 2026. This major fashion exhibition celebrates one of Britain’s most influential designers by tracing her journey from punk rebellion to couture innovation through a retrospective of her work.
Spanning from the early 1980s to the 2000s, it charts her evolution from Vivienne Westwood’s partnership with Malcolm McLaren to her reinvention of historical dress. It explores how she fused subculture with tradition, transforming references from 18th-century art, British heritage, and political activism into a unique design language.
Fashion collections and archival pieces
The fashion exhibition features more than 40 complete ensembles, alongside garments, accessories, jewellery, and ephemera that draw from rare private archives. The display includes pieces from major fashion collections, particularly the Peter Smithson archive, as well as loans from the Manchester Art Gallery and the Fashion Museum in Bath.
The garments are displayed in chronological order, from the rebellious World’s End years to later couture collections. This highlights important milestones, such as the introduction of the iconic orb logo and Westwood’s award-winning designs from the early 1990s.
A radical vision of fashion
A dedicated section recreates the atmosphere of a working studio, revealing the craft behind Westwood’s radical silhouettes. Calico toiles, sewing tools and digitally deconstructed pieces developed in collaboration with Northumbria University offer insight into her techniques, from bias cutting to distressed fabric treatments. This immersive approach positions the exhibition as both a retrospective and a study of process and experimentation.
The exhibition also presents Westwood’s work alongside over 80 historic objects from the museum’s collection. Paintings, textiles and decorative arts reflect the designer’s influences, highlighting her fascination with art history and theatrical presentation. The result is a layered narrative in which past and present collide, further establishing her reputation as a storyteller and a provocateur.
One of the most significant fashion exhibitions to date
Building on the success of previous projects dedicated to Westwood, this ambitious showcase is the most comprehensive Vivienne Westwood exhibition the museum has staged to date. By combining rare fashion collections, archival material and scenographic storytelling, the exhibition offers an intimate yet expansive portrait of a designer who redefined fashion as both craft and cultural commentary.

Portrait, AW 1990/91
Cotton, silk, leather
Photography by Claire Collinson, courtesy of THE BOWES MUSEUM

Harris Tweed, AW 1987/88
Wool, cotton, synthetic, leather, wood
Courtesy of THE BOWES MUSEUM

Anglomania, AW 1993/94
Mohair, wool, cotton
Photography by Claire Collinson, courtesy of THE BOWES MUSEUM
