This Week in London – ‘Samurai’ at the British Museum; V&A East’s first exhibition; and, Jane Austen and the Royal Navy…

Domenico Tintoretto, Portrait of Itō Mancio, Oil on canvas, Italy (1585), Property of Fondazione Trivulzio, Milan

The evolution of the samurai over the past 1,000 years is the subject of a new exhibition at The British Museum. Samurai brings together around 280 objects and digital media as it explores the role of samurai as warrior as well as the later roles they fulfilled, during a prolonged peace after 1615, as government officials, scholars and patrons of the arts with women making up half of the samurai class. On display will be a suit of samurai armour, complete with helmet and golden standard, which was recently acquired by the museum as well as a vermillion red woman’s firefighting jacket, a rare portrait of Itō Mancio, a 13-year-old samurai who led an embassy to the Vatican in 1582, by Domenico Tintoretto (pictured), and a portrait of Henry, Count of Bourbon, which portrays him as a samurai warrior and which was commissioned by him while visiting Japan in 1889. The exhibition, which opens on 3rd February, runs until 4th May in The Sainsbury Exhibitions Gallery. Admission charge applies. For more, see www.britishmuseum.org/exhibitions/samurai.

• Tickets are now on sale for the V&E East Museum’s first exhibition, The Music is Black: A British Story. The multi-sensory exhibition features more than 200 objects ranging from musical instruments to soundtracks,
artworks, fashion, and personal belongings of world-famed artists including Winifred Atwell’s piano, the Nintendo Jme used for early music experiments, fashion worn by Little Simz, Seal, Dame Shirley Bassey and Skin and newly acquired photographs of Kemistry and Storm, Mis-Teeq, and Skepta. The exhibition opens on 18th April. Admission charge applies. For more, see www.vam.ac.uk/exhibitions/the-music-is-black-a-british-story

An etching print of the Canopus signed by artist Richard Henry Nibbs (c1849). PICTURE: ©National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London.

On Now: Jane Austen and the Royal Navy. This display at the National Maritime Museum marks the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth and features manuscripts relating to her youngest brothers Francis and Charles Austen, both of whom had naval careers, and explores Jane’s connections to the Royal Navy and the influence her brothers had in her works. Francis – known as Frank (born in 1774) – entered the Royal Navy at the age of 12 and rose through the ranks to eventually captain the HMS Canopus during the Napoleonic Wars while Charles (born in 1779) also entered the Navy at age 12, was on board the Endymion when it captured the French ship Le Scipio, was captain of the Phoenix when it was wrecked at sea and ended his career as commander-in-chief of the East Indies and China Station. The display in the Caird Library can be seen until March. Admission is free. For more, see www.rmg.co.uk/national-maritime-museum.

Send all items to exploringlondon@gmail.com.

LondonLife – Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park…

PICTURE: John-Mark Strange/Unsplash

This Week in London – New V&A East Storehouse opens this weekend; novelist Barbara Pym honoured with a Blue Plaque; and, new children’s mudlarking trail at London Museum Docklands…

Visitors in the central Weston Collections Hall at V&A East Storehouse, a working store and new visitor attraction from the V&A located in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, London, opening this Saturday, 31st May. PICTURE: David Parry/PA Media Ass

The V&A East Storehouse opens to the public for the first time in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park this Saturday. The venue features more than 100 mini-displays centred on the themes of ‘Collecting Stories’, ‘Sourcebook for Design’ and ‘The Working Museum’ and boasting more than 1,500 items from across the V&A’s collections with works by Hew Locke, Zaha Hadid, Daniel Liebskind and Thomas Heatherwick’s London 2012 Olympic cauldron model among those featured. A massive 11-metre-wide stage cloth designed by Pablo Picasso for the Ballets Russes’ 1924 production, Le Train Bleu, will be displayed for first time in more than 10 years while among large scale objects are a section of the now-demolished housing estate, Robin Hood Gardens, and Frank Lloyd Wright’s 1930s Kaufmann Office – the only Frank Lloyd Wright interior outside of the US. Anyone can book access to any object in the storehouse for free via the ‘Order an Object’ process and the venue is also hosting a series of live events including back2back: Archival Bodies, and new programming strand, A Life in the Work of Others – featuring Turner-Prize-winning artist, Jasleen Kaur. Admission to the Storehouse at Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, is free. For more, see www.vam.ac.uk/east.

Visitors looking at a two-storey section of Robin Hood Gardens, at V&A East Storehouse, a working store and new visitor attraction from the V&A located in Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park in Stratford, London, opening this Saturday, 31st May. PICTURE: David Parry/PA Media Assignme

The home where novelist Barbara Pym began writing her celebrated 1952 novel Excellent Women has been given an English Heritage Blue Plaque. Pym lived at the second floor flat at 108 Cambridge Street in Pimlico with her sister Hilary between November 1945 to autumn 1949. It was from a corner room, overlooking Warwick Square and St Gabriel’s Church, that she meticulously recorded her observations, and laid the groundwork for her distinctive literary voice. Her work during this period also included revising the text for her first published novel, Some Tame Gazelle (1950). In March, three more Blue Plaques were unveiled commemorating women: Una Marson (1905–1965), the BBC’s first Black woman producer at The Mansions, Mill Lane in West Hampstead where she lived from at least 1939 to 1943; and, Rhoda Garrett (1841–1882) and Agnes Garrett (1845–1935), at 2 Gower Street in Bloomsbury where they founded Britain’s first female-run interior-decorating business. For more, see www.english-heritage.org.uk/visit/blue-plaques/.

• A free family trail inspired by Jessie Burton’s new children’s book, Hidden Treasure, has launched at the London Museum Docklands. Inspired by the tale of two young mudlarks, the trail takes families on a journey around the museum’s galleries to learn more about centuries of life by the river. It’s aimed at children under 12-years-old, who also have free entry into the museum’s mudlarking exhibition, Secrets of the Thames. For more, see www.londonmuseum.org.uk.

Send all items for inclusion to exploringlondon@gmail.com

LondonLife – Skyline cranes…

Cranes above Queen Elizabeth Olympic Park. PICTURE: Gabriel Kraus/Unsplash.

LondonLife – LEGO celebrates the Tube’s 150th…

Lego-Tube-map

Six-year-old James Apps gets a close-up look at a map of the Tube as it will look in 2020, one of five LEGO Tube maps currently on display in London. The maps depict the evolution of the Tube network from 1927 through what it will look like in 2020, including Crossrail, and the proposed Northern Line extension and proposed Croxley Rail Link. The maps – each of which contains more than 1,000 bricks and took professional LEGO builder Duncan Titmarsh four days to build – can be found in the ticket halls of the following stations – South Kensington (1927), Piccadilly Circus (1933), Green Park (1968), Stratford (2013) and King’s Cross (2020). Visit the Transport for London website for more on the Underground’s 150th anniversary here (the website includes downloadable instructions for building your own Underground roundel out of LEGO bricks). PICTURE: Transport for London.