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DIARY 1
Beautiful People: The Boutique in 1960s Counterculture
1 October 2021 – 13 March 2022 Fashion and Textile Museum, London
Celebrating the ’60s fashion revolution sparked by Chelsea boutiques such as Granny Takes A Trip, Mr Fish and Biba, these era-defining stores will be recreated, and their clothes, worn by the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and Jimi Hendrix, displayed.
ftmlondon.org
2 NeoCon
4 – 6 October theMART, Chicago
Aiming for an ‘unhampered in-person NeoCon’, the commercial design community is invited to come together for product launches, special installations and an events programme including daily keynotes – the keynotes will also be streamed as part of the accompanying virtual programme.
neocon.com
3
Workspace Show 4 – 5 November Business Design Centre, London
The UK’s first dedicated workspace design show will hold its inaugural event focused on ‘re- designing tomorrow’s commercial interiors together’. Over two days there will be product showcases, design talks from industry leaders, as well as a more informal ‘pub quiz night’.
workspaceshow.co.uk
WORDS BY SOPHIE TOLHURST 4
British Ceramics Biennial 11 September – 17 October Swift House, Stoke-on-Trent
A five-week festival of artist commissions, exhibitions and hands-on events accompanied by an inaugural online programme. Highlights include the AWARD exhibition; a large installation of 250 plates designed by local residents; and cultural exchanges with potters from Gundiyali, India and Kasama, Japan.
britishceramicsbiennial.com
5 Tokyo 1964: Designing Tomorrow 5 August – 7 November Japan House London, London
The exhibition explores how Japanese designers and architects shaped the 1964 Olympic Games, in part to reframe how the world perceived Japan. The first ever sports pictograms, Games posters, original architectural models and uniforms will all be on display.
japanhouselondon.uk
1. KARL FERRIS 4. ALISON COOKE 5. COURTESY OF PRINCE CHICHIBU MEMORIAL SPORTS MUSEUM
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