Luke Hayes/The Design Museum
The Design Museum in London’s latest exhibition, , is a fresh foray into the question of how we work with, and for, the natural world. It is an intriguing show (on until 5 October), with thought-provoking, stunning installations.
Being Landscape kicks things off, with its emphasis that humans are part of the natural world, from the woven baskets (pictured above) of the Indigenous Ye’kuana people of Venezuela and Brazil to the rumiti, ivy-covered “tree-men” of southern Italy.
Next is Making with the World, which features architect Andrés Jaque’s Transspecies Rosette. A beautiful, practical cork-and-resin cladding that provides waterproof insulation for buildings and a home for microbes, fungi and more.
Shifting Perspective is a fitting finale, with a tapestry iteration of artist Alexandra Daisy Ginsberg’s Pollinator Pathmaker project at its centre. This shows a garden from an insect’s perspective, challenging us to see the world as animals and plants do.
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![Ryoji Ikeda, data-cosm [n?1], 180 Studios, 2025. Photo by Alice Lubbock.](https://images.newscientist.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/23114419/SEI_281523359.jpg)
