wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects

wes anderson exhibition unveils 30 years of worldbuilding

 

A monumental candy-pink model of the Grand Budapest Hotel greets visitors inside the Design Museum’s newest exhibition, Wes Anderson: The Archives, a landmark retrospective that gathers more than 700 objects from the filmmaker’s world (find designboom’s previous coverage here). Opening on November 21st, 2025, and running until July 26th, 2026, the show marks the first time Wes Anderson’s archives have been publicly displayed in the UK, bringing together 30 years of filmmaking, including storyboards, costumes, notebooks, miniature sets, and newly revealed pieces from his latest feature, The Phoenician Scheme (2025). 

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
all images by Luke Hayes, unless stated otherwise

 

 

an unprecedented look inside the filmmaker’s personal archive

 

For nearly thirty years, Wes Anderson has preserved thousands of objects from every film he has made, a habit that began after discovering that all the items created for Bottle Rocket (1996) had been dispersed by the production company. From Rushmore (1998) onward, he has acted as the custodian of each crafted element, making sure that even the most fleeting on-screen objects were kept intact. The Design Museum and la Cinémathèque française have now been granted rare access to this trove. More than 300 pieces not shown in Paris have been added for the London edition, offering an expanded, behind-the-scenes reading of how Anderson constructs his distinct visual worlds.

 

Across the exhibition, visitors encounter original storyboards, polaroids, sketches, and Wes Anderson’s spiral-bound notebooks filled with handwritten ideas and scene studies. The chronological layout traces his evolution from the 1990s through The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar (2023) and The Phoenician Scheme (2025), with each film occupying its own section. 

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
Wes Anderson in front of the Grand Budapest Hotel model | image by Matt Alexander, PA Media Assignments

 

 

newly revealed props from the phoenician scheme

 

For the first time, objects from Anderson’s latest feature appear in a museum setting. These include over two dozen items, such as a Dunhill pipe and a jeweled dagger crafted by artist Harumi Klossowska de Rola. In the words of curators Lucia Savi and Johanna Agerman Ross, ‘The inclusion of these objects from The Phoenician Scheme is a fitting conclusion of this expansive exhibition… So, we are thrilled that we can bring this latest chapter in Wes Anderson’s story to visitors.’

 

The film’s protagonist, Anatole ‘Zsa-zsa’ Korda, a devoted collector within the narrative, becomes a mirror for Anderson’s own lifelong instinct to gather and preserve.

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
Wes Anderson has preserved thousands of objects from every film he has made

 

 

iconic pieces from across the filmography at the design museum

 

Among the most striking displays is the three-meter-wide model of the Grand Budapest Hotel facade, used during the filming of the 2014 movie. Nearby, visitors encounter the vending machines from Asteroid City (2023), the FENDI fur coat worn by Gwyneth Paltrow as Margot Tenenbaum, and original puppets of the fantastical sea creatures from The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004). The exhibition also reunites The Grand Budapest Hotel’s Boy with Apple painting with costumes worn by Ralph Fiennes as concierge Gustave H and Tilda Swinton as Madame D, one of many instances where crafted artworks, wardrobe pieces, and narrative objects are shown together to illuminate how Anderson forms character through design.

 

Costumes, a crucial part of his world-building, appear in abundance, including Milena Canonero’s Oscar-winning ensembles from The Grand Budapest Hotel, uniforms from Rushmore, the Zissou crew’s full outfits, and looks worn by Scarlett Johansson, Bill Murray, Owen Wilson, Benicio del Toro, Jason Schwartzman, Jeffrey Wright, and others. A large selection of puppets from Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009) and Isle of Dogs (2018), featuring Mr. Fox in his corduroy suit and the show dog Nutmeg, reveals the meticulous labor behind Anderson’s stop-motion productions.

 

The show also screens three key short films in full: Bottle Rocket (1993), Hotel Chevalier (2007), and Castello Cavalcanti (2013), as well as The Swan from Anderson’s 2023 Roald Dahl anthology. Seen together, they trace his evolving use of the short-form format, from early collaborations with Owen Wilson to later partnerships with Prada.

For visitors, the 14-minute original Bottle Rocket short is a notable highlight, rarely shown and foundational to the filmmaker’s early development.

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
featuring costumes worn by Ralph Fiennes as concierge Gustave H and Tilda Swinton as Madame D

 

 

filmmaking through collaboration

 

A major thread in the exhibition focuses on the contributions of Anderson’s long-standing collaborators: illustrators Javi Aznarez and Eric Chase Anderson; composers Alexandre Desplat and Randall Poster; production designers Mark Friedberg and Adam Stockhausen; costume designer Milena Canonero; model maker Simon Weisse; puppet fabricator Andy Gent; and many others. ‘It is an absolute gift that even as a young film-maker Wes Anderson had the vision and foresight to save all his props and beautifully crafted objects for his own archive,’ notes Johanna Agerman Ross. Director of the Design Museum Tim Marlow adds that Anderson’s attention to detail ‘is underpinned by an acute understanding of design and craftsmanship, which is why the Design Museum is the perfect location for this landmark retrospective.’

 

While the exhibition premiered in Paris earlier this year, the London edition is significantly expanded and re-imagined. The additional 300+ objects and new interpretive focus offer a deeper look at the craftsmanship behind Anderson’s world-building — from the texture of fabrics to the engineering of miniatures and the layering of references that shape each narrative universe. An accompanying catalogue, produced with Anderson, brings together essays, interviews, and photography that extend the exhibition’s themes, featuring voices from collaborators including Owen Wilson, Scarlett Johansson, Jason Schwartzman, Tilda Swinton, Alexandre Desplat, Seu Jorge, and Randall Poster.

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
the show marks the first time Wes Anderson’s archives have been publicly displayed in the UK

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
costumes and creatures from The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004)

major-wes-anderson-retrospective-design-museum-700-archival-objects-designboom-large02

model of Deep Search, Steve Zissou’s submarine

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
costumes and objects from Moonrise Kingdom (2012)

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
items featured in Asteroid City (2023)

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
miniature figures from Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
miniature washing machines from Isle of Dogs | image by Richard Round-Turner © the Design Museum

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
figures from Isle of Dogs (2018)

major-wes-anderson-retrospective-design-museum-700-archival-objects-designboom-large01

scene from Isle of Dogs (2018)

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
Fantastic Mr. Fox figure

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
Vending machines, Atelier Simon Weisse from Asteroid City | image by Richard Round-Turner © the Design Museum

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
the London edition is significantly expanded and re-imagined

wes anderson retrospective at london's design museum features over 700 archival objects
bringing together 30 years of filmmaking

 

 

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Major Domo, Isle of Dogs (2018)
Major Domo, Isle of Dogs (2018)
costume from The Darjeeling Limited (2007)
costume from The Darjeeling Limited (2007)
for the first time, objects from Anderson’s latest feature appear in a museum setting
for the first time, objects from Anderson’s latest feature appear in a museum setting
figures from Isle of Dogs (2018)
figures from Isle of Dogs (2018)
a Dunhill pipe and a jeweled dagger crafted by artist Harumi Klossowska de Rola
a Dunhill pipe and a jeweled dagger crafted by artist Harumi Klossowska de Rola
Rat from Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)
Rat from Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)
 
 
 
Model of THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL © Thierry Stefanopoulos – La Cinémathèque française
Model of THE GRAND BUDAPEST HOTEL © Thierry Stefanopoulos – La Cinémathèque française
Wes Anderson with the model of the Grand Budapest Hotel © Thierry Stefanopoulos – La Cinémathèque française
Wes Anderson with the model of the Grand Budapest Hotel © Thierry Stefanopoulos – La Cinémathèque française
Max Fischer's RUSHMORE Swiss Army knife | image by Roger Do Minh. © the Design Museum
Max Fischer's RUSHMORE Swiss Army knife | image by Roger Do Minh. © the Design Museum
Tracy's puppet (detail), Arch Model Studio, ISLE OF DOGS | image by Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Tracy's puppet (detail), Arch Model Studio, ISLE OF DOGS | image by Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Richie Tenenbaum poster, THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Richie Tenenbaum poster, THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Sam Shakuski’s Scout kit, MOONRISE KINGDOM. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Sam Shakuski’s Scout kit, MOONRISE KINGDOM. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
François Voltaire suitcases of the Whitman brothers. Marc Jacobs for Louis Vuitton. Wildlife print designed by Eric Chase Anderson. THE DARJEELING LIMITED | image by Roger Do Minh. © the Design Museum
François Voltaire suitcases of the Whitman brothers. Marc Jacobs for Louis Vuitton. Wildlife print designed by Eric Chase Anderson. THE DARJEELING LIMITED | image by Roger Do Minh. © the Design Museum
Miniature model of a train. THE DARJEELING LIMITED. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Miniature model of a train. THE DARJEELING LIMITED. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Miniature motorcycle of Mr. Fox, Arch Model Studio, FANTASTIC MR. FOX. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Miniature motorcycle of Mr. Fox, Arch Model Studio, FANTASTIC MR. FOX. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Rat puppet, Arch Model Studio, FANTASTIC MR. FOX. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Rat puppet, Arch Model Studio, FANTASTIC MR. FOX. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Wes Anderson's personal notebooks from THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS. Photo by Roger Do Minh. © Wes Anderson
Wes Anderson's personal notebooks from THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS. Photo by Roger Do Minh. © Wes Anderson
Miniature model and sign of the train, THE DARJEELING LIMITED, and blackboard depicting the Solar System, ASTEROID CITY. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Miniature model and sign of the train, THE DARJEELING LIMITED, and blackboard depicting the Solar System, ASTEROID CITY. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
THE FRENCH DISPATCH magazine. Photo Roger Do Minh. © the Design Museum
THE FRENCH DISPATCH magazine. Photo Roger Do Minh. © the Design Museum
Boy with Apple (detail)
Boy with Apple (detail)

project info:

 

name: Wes Anderson: The Archives

museum: the Design Museum | @designmuseum

location: 224-238 Kensington High Street, London, United Kingdom

collaborator: La Cinémathèque francaise | @cinemathequefr

dates: November 21st 2025 – July 26th 2026

curators: Lucia Savi, Johanna Agerman Ross

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