How to Design an Exhibition: These 5 Tips Should Be Your Mantra (2024)

How to Design an Exhibition: These 5 Tips Should Be Your Mantra (1)

Creating an exhibition is an imaginative endeavour that thankfully doesn’t adhere to any stringent rules dictating its success or failure. From my decade-plus experience in the industry, I’ve gathered a number of observations that I find useful to remember.

Typically, the production of an exhibition is a team effort, involving a variety of participants with different objectives. Maintaining a consistent vision from start to finish in every project poses its own challenges. Consequently, I’m offering a brief guideline that could assist any team in steering clear of usual missteps while crafting compelling and captivating exhibitions.

1. Your exhibition is unique. Don’t copy others.

Although it’s great to begin a creative process with mood boards, a review of best practices, inspiring images and a list of “cool” up and coming technologies, its good to keep in mind that there is no better process than beginning a project with a clean slate. What is the unique story that THIS exhibition will tell? What kind of interactive experiences could allow the visitors to engage with the stories to be told? With today’s easy access to gazillions of inspiration images, it can be tempting – and timesaving – to cut and paste. It’s much harder to come up with the right content and the best stories than the right technology or the right means of display.

2. You can’t please everybody. It’s a fact.

It’s tempting to want to create an exhibition that is everything for everybody. We’ve come to realise that the most interesting projects are those that do more of one thing and less of another. An exhibition is a creative act, and focus and constraints gives it strength. Memorable exhibitions are those where the list of what is not shown is as important as what is shown. A good creative brief should include what the project will not be. Targeting specific audiences can also help give an editorial edge to an exhibition, and will not necessarily mean that other audiences will not enjoy it.

How to Design an Exhibition: These 5 Tips Should Be Your Mantra (2)

3. You’re creating an experience. Not a content grid.

Many exhibition projects begin with a strong curatorial input that translates into messages and exhibition zones via a content grid. All too often however, no room is left in the creative process to brainstorm on the exhibition’s content and experience with the design team – and many valuable ideas can come out of this forum as well. In certain cases, approaching content and messaging from a design perspective can also bring solutions to the table that are more playful or that use various senses or involve different learning approaches. All too often this process is not valued or budgeted and interesting opportunities are not given the light of day.

4. Physical and digital environments are a fact.

In more and more of our projects, we see a larger percentage of the production budget allocated to media. Traditional and interactive media can provide invaluable depth to exhibition subjects as well as opportunities for transmedia storytelling, thus expanding the exhibition into the spheres of the web or social media, augmenting audience outreach and creating potential new partnerships for a museum. A good creative brief should include strategic budget allocations from the get go.

5. Yes, there is such a thing as way too much content

We frequently embark on projects where the educational objectives are numerous. Many stories to tell, much information to deliver, but a limited amount of square feet. The more we try to fit all the content in, the less space we leave visitors to make up their own minds, to experiment with their own ideas, to dream, to escape, to formulate their own impressions and ideas. We live in a time where many online resources exist, relieving museums from the burden of being encyclopaedic. More and more visitors come to museums equipped with smart phones that allow them to Google any fact at any time. Does the exhibition really need to explain everything? What experiences can only be lived inside the museum space and should therefore be valued over others? What will create a memorable experience that will be resonate weeks after a visit in a visitor’s mind? Leaving some creative space in exhibitions is never a bad idea.

Read these 5 tips over and over again. During the design of your exhibition, take some distance and come back to them. An exhibition should be a learning space, and as such, it should inspire through its content and also the experience it offers.

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About the author – Geneviève Angio-Morneau

Geneviève Angio-Morneau is Creative Directorand Head of Content atGSM Project

How to Design an Exhibition: These 5 Tips Should Be Your Mantra (2024)

FAQs

How to Design an Exhibition: These 5 Tips Should Be Your Mantra? ›

Designing an exhibition layout requires a combination of creativity, organisation, and attention to detail. By defining your objectives, considering visitor flow, creating engaging focal points, and providing comfort and amenities, you can create a remarkable experience for both exhibitors and attendees.

How to create an exhibition layout? ›

Designing an exhibition layout requires a combination of creativity, organisation, and attention to detail. By defining your objectives, considering visitor flow, creating engaging focal points, and providing comfort and amenities, you can create a remarkable experience for both exhibitors and attendees.

What is the exhibition design? ›

Exhibition Design is focused on the communication of objects, information and ideas in the built environment and their impact on community interaction and audience engagement.

What are the three principles of exhibition design? ›

The current article will describe principles of visitor behavior that relate to three other aspects of exhibit design: (1) the characteristics of the exhibit object or animal; (2) the characteristics of exhibit architecture; and (3) the characteristics of the visitors.

What makes an exhibit good? ›

Every museum exhibit should tell a story, rather than being a random assortment of displays. What's the larger message you want to convey to visitors? Always design with the big picture in mind when you're planning a museum exhibition.

How does an exhibition look like? ›

Generally, art exhibitions are filled with tangible artistic displays like paintings, drawings, photography, sculptures, performances and videos.

What makes a good exhibition stand? ›

Make good use of your space

With stand space, less is most definitely more! Overcrowding with furniture will repel passers-by rather than encourage them to come over. Getting this balance right could be the difference between your stand generating a positive and negative ROI, so think it through carefully.

What are the elements of exhibition? ›

The layout and flow, branding and graphics, lighting, furniture and displays, technology and interactive elements, as well as signage and wayfinding, all play crucial roles in designing an impactful exhibition stall.

How do I get my artwork into an exhibition? ›

Curators and galleries can only offer an exhibition to an artist they have heard of. Building your network and telling people when you are interested in exhibiting is more likely to lead to a show. Some galleries are open to approaches from artists. Having an exhibtion is generally decided by a gallery, not an artist.

How to become an exhibit artist? ›

Position Requirements

Possession of a degree in an art or exhibit related field. Four years of experience in exhibit or display work involving design, fabrication, and installation. Museum experience and experience with interactive exhibits are highly desirable.

References

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