
UK's first dedicated Marie Antoinette exhibition to open at London museum
Marie Antoinette Style will open at the museum in September, and will feature 250 objects including clothing and decorative arts, with some loaned from France's Chateau De Versailles.
The exhibition's curator, Sarah Grant, said: 'The most fashionable, scrutinised and controversial queen in history, Marie Antoinette's name summons both visions of excess and objects and interiors of great beauty.
Wedding gown of Duchess Hedvig Elisabeth Charlotta, later queen of Sweden, which will be on display (Goran Schmidt/Livrustkammaren/SHM/PA)
'The Austrian archduchess-turned queen of France had an enormous impact on European taste and fashion in her own time, creating a distinctive style that now has universal appeal and application.
'This exhibition explores that style and the figure at its centre, using a range of exquisite objects belonging to Marie Antoinette, alongside the most beautiful fine and decorative objects that her legacy has inspired.
'This is the design legacy of an early modern celebrity and the story of a woman whose power to fascinate has never ebbed. Marie Antoinette's story has been re-told and re-purposed by each successive generation to suit its own ends.
'The rare combination of glamour, spectacle and tragedy she presents remains as intoxicating today as it was in the 18th century.'
The exhibition will feature richly embellished fragments of court dress, the queen's own silk slippers, and jewels from her private collection.
There will also be a number of items which have never left France before, such as the queen's dinner service from the Petit Trianon, her accessories and items from her toilette case.
Marie Antoinette Style will look at Antoinette's origins and impact on style from her own time to the present day through audio visual installations and 'immersive' curation.
A white dress which will be part of the exhibition (Victoria and AlbertMuseum, London/PA)
A scent experience will re-create the smells of the court, and the perfume favoured by the Antoinette.
The exhibition will also feature contemporary clothing including pieces by designers such as Moschino, Dior, Chanel, Erdem, Vivienne Westwood and Valentino – and costumes from Sofia Coppola's Oscar-winning Marie Antoinette staring Kirsten Dunst.
Tickets for the exhibition go on sale on Tuesday and are available from the V&A website.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mirror
31 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Royal Ascot 2025 jockey flies 10.5k miles for ‘one of top moments of my career'
Two-time Melbourne Cup-winning jockey Mark Zahra rode his first royal meeting winner on his debut at the meeting when Docklands won a photo-finish for the Queen Anne Stakes One of the stars of the saddle from Australia flew 10,500 miles to realise 'one of the top moments of my career' on his Royal Ascot debut. The Harry Eustace-trained Docklands finished second in the Queen Anne Stakes 12 months ago when ridden by Hayley Turner. Turner retired from the saddle this year after announcing she was pregnant, leaving the ride on the five-year-old, owned by Aussie-run syndicate OTI Racing, vacant. Richard Kingscote rode Docklands to two defeats this year but connections booked two-time Melbourne Cup-winning jockey Mark Zahra for the Queen Anne Stakes, even though he had never ridden at the meeting before. Docklands, last away from the stalls, made his move on the far side of the group and battled it out with favourite Rosallion to edge a photo-finish by a nose, scoring at odds of 14-1, despite Zahra losing his whip in the closing stages. 'Everyone kept scaring me about the whip rules, I thought it was easier to throw it away at the 200m,' said the jockey. 'It was a very slow, slow speed. I crept as much as I could, got room at the right time, he burst through and kept responding. It was such a tough effort. 'What an amazing feeling. The build-up was amazing and the crowd is here. It's one of the top moments of my career for sure.' Harry Eustace, who took over the Newmarket yard of his Royal Ascot-winning father James when he started training, said: 'This is pretty sweet. 'It was tough watching. A photo is tough. If ever there was a track where you need a horse as a specialist, it's here because it's the best racing. 'I can't thank Terry Henderson and OTI enough. They got offered a huge amount of money after he won the Britannia here. They wanted to enjoy a good racehorse and roll the dice. Thankfully it's paid off.' Richard Hannon, who trained Rosallion to win the St James's Palace Stakes last year, was gutted to miss out with the 5-2 favourite. 'He's still a top class miler. I thought he had it there. He did everything but win and you can't ask for much more than that. It hurts, but so it should. He's beaten an awful lot of champions, hit the front, got done, but no one died.'

Leader Live
an hour ago
- Leader Live
Sir Rod Stewart promises ‘sexy' show for Glastonbury
The Scottish singer, who will take to the Pyramid stage for the coveted Sunday tea-time legends slot later this month, also revealed his appearance will cost him financially, but said it 'doesn't matter'. Sir Rod told the Radio Times that as he has been carrying out a concert residency in Las Vegas, he will have to pay to ship all his equipment back to the UK for the festival. 'It's going to cost me £300,000 to do it and they only pay you about 120,000 quid,' he said. Sir Rod, who has already revealed that his former Faces bandmate Ronnie Wood will join him on stage, said he will have three different guests coming on, plus an orchestra. 'I'm really looking forward to it,' he added. 'And it is a different gig. It's like when you're playing a cup final: you're trying to treat it like another game. But, of course, it's not. It's special. 'It'll be glamorous, it'll be sexy. 'And we've got a little orchestra coming on to play with us. 'And we may have some bagpipes…' Earlier this month, Sir Rod announced that he had cancelled or postponed a number of his US concerts after suffering from flu. 'I have to cancel and reschedule my next six concerts in June as I continue to recover from the flu,' he wrote on Instagram. 'So sorry my friends. 'I'm devastated and sincerely apologise for any inconvenience to my fans. 'I'll be back on stage and will see you soon.' Sir Rod will take to the Pyramid stage on Sunday June 29. The 80-year-old has previously said he was only due to play for an hour and a quarter, but has begged to be allowed to play for an extra 15 minutes so he can fit more songs into his set. In 2024 he promised he would not retire but confirmed his 2025 European and North American shows would bring an end to his 'large-scale world tours'. Sir Rod's best known solo songs include Da Ya Think I'm Sexy?, Every Beat Of My Heart, and Maggie May. Last month he was presented with a prestigious lifetime achievement award by five of his children at the American Music Awards (AMAs).


Belfast Telegraph
an hour ago
- Belfast Telegraph
US country star cancels Belfast gig and rest of European tour: ‘It wasn't an easy decision'
©UK Independent US country star Hardy has cancelled his gig at the Ulster Hall which was set to take place in just over two weeks' time. The Philadelphia-born singer-songwriter also scrapped the rest of the European leg of his Jim Bob Tour just days before it was scheduled to begin in Copenhagen, Denmark on Thursday.