In a quiet corner of central London, a new kind of classroom is taking shape. Hauser & Wirth’s latest Education Lab initiative, “Memory Cabinet-Making Our Memories Physical,” invites visitors to step beyond the traditional gallery experience and into an active space of learning, reflection, and making. Blurring the boundaries between art, education, and community practice, the project turns the act of remembering into a tactile, collaborative experiment-asking what happens when personal and collective memories are not only recalled, but built, arranged, and housed within a shared “cabinet” of experience.
Exploring Memory Cabinet at Hauser & Wirth London A New Chapter for Education Lab
Inside Hauser & Wirth’s London gallery, an ordinary display case becomes an experimental classroom.The Education Lab’s latest iteration invites visitors to consider how personal and collective histories are stored, handled and reimagined when they leave the realm of the purely digital. Sketches, tactile prompts and archival fragments are arranged alongside newly commissioned pieces, forming a kind of living index that asks: what happens when memories are given weight, texture and fragility? Through participatory stations and evolving displays, audiences are encouraged not only to look, but to contribute, treating the gallery as a site of shared authorship rather than silent observation.
Responding to the rhythms of the city, the project uses London itself as source material, threading local stories into a wider conversation about preservation, loss and reinvention. Educators, artists and community groups collaborate through programmed workshops that gently blur the line between artwork and evidence, between personal narrative and public archive. Visitors encounter:
- Interactive prompts that translate memories into drawings, notes and small sculptural forms
- Archival fragments from previous Education Lab projects, recontextualised for a London audience
- Facilitated sessions with artists and educators exploring memory through sound, text and object-making
| Focus | Format |
| Personal archives | Hands-on making |
| City narratives | Collaborative mapping |
| Shared memory | Collective storytelling |
How Art Makes Memory Tangible Interactive Techniques that Engage Visitors of All Ages
In the gallery’s learning spaces, recollection is treated as a raw material that can be shaped, layered and exchanged. Children and adults are invited to translate fleeting impressions into objects, textures and gestures: a whispered story becomes a strip of embossed foil; the smell of a family kitchen is captured in a swatch of coloured paper; a favourite song is traced as a looping line of thread.Facilitators use simple prompts-“draw the route to somewhere you love” or “build the shape of a forgotten sound”-to transform private memories into shared artefacts. These hands-on encounters slow visitors down, asking them to handle fabric, paper, wood and clay, and in doing so to notice how memory shifts when it is made physical, displayed, or even traded with someone else.
- Touch-based stations where visitors emboss, stamp or weave symbolic fragments of personal history.
- Collaborative collage walls that grow throughout the day as guests pin up images, notes and sketches.
- Audio corners for recording short recollections, later paired with small sculptural “listening props”.
- Light and shadow tables that let participants stage tiny scenes from remembered places using silhouettes.
| Age Group | Key Activity | Memory Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Children | Story-drawing mats | Linking images to first memories |
| Teens | Zine-style booklets | Framing identity and belonging |
| Adults | Object mapping sessions | Revisiting and reordering life events |
| Intergenerational | Shared “memory cabinet” shelves | Building a collective archive |
Inside the Collaborative Process Artists Educators and Communities Building a Shared Archive
In the Education Lab, the act of making memories tangible is negotiated in real time between artists, educators and local participants: sketches become prompts, family stories turn into objects, and classroom exercises evolve into exhibition material.Around shared tables, school groups, youth clubs and neighbourhood organisations respond to questions posed by the project team-What do you keep? What do you let go?-shaping an ever-growing constellation of artefacts that blur the line between artwork and personal keepsake. The process is deliberately non-hierarchical; educators facilitate rather than instruct, artists listen as much as they propose, and visitors are invited to annotate, re-arrange and occasionally challenge what has already been placed in the Memory Cabinet.
- Artists contribute frameworks, visual languages and experimental methods.
- Educators design access points, from school worksheets to tactile prompts.
- Communities bring lived experience, local histories and everyday objects.
| Role | Key Action |
|---|---|
| Artist | Transforms stories into visual forms |
| Educator | Guides reflection and dialog |
| Community Member | Donates memories and meanings |
What emerges is a shared archive that resists closure: labels can be rewritten,objects can be swapped or returned,and new contributions continually alter the cabinet’s internal logic. Participants frequently enough describe a shift from seeing archives as static repositories to understanding them as living,porous structures that mirror the city’s own flux. This collaborative methodology not only documents how people in London remember, but also how they negotiate ownership of those memories-who can tell which story, and in whose words-turning the Education Lab into a testing ground for more democratic forms of cultural memory.
Practical Takeaways for Educators Bringing Memory Cabinet Strategies into Classrooms and Museums
In both classrooms and galleries, the key is to treat memory as a material that can be collected, arranged and re‑arranged. Begin by offering students a small, defined “cabinet” space-a box, a shelf, a wall grid, even a digital folder-and invite them to curate it with fragments of their learning: sketches, ticket stubs, copied quotes, sound recordings, found objects. Encourage them to label each item with a brief note about why it matters, not just what it is indeed. Simple prompts such as “an object that changed my mind” or “a texture that reminds me of today’s lesson” help participants move beyond factual recall into affective memory. In museum settings, mobile “memory trays” or clipboards allow visitors to collect responses as they move through the galleries, transforming a passive viewing experience into an active act of archiving.
- Start small: Dedicate one corner of the room as a rotating memory vignette.
- Use mixed media: Combine text, image, sound and found materials.
- Build routines: End each session with a two‑minute “add to the cabinet” ritual.
- Invite collaboration: Create shared cabinets for group projects or family days.
- Connect to curriculum: Link objects to key concepts, artists or historical moments.
| Context | Simple Cabinet Activity | Learning Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Primary classroom | “Today in three objects” shelf | Reflection & sequencing |
| Secondary art studio | Personal symbolism boxes | Visual literacy & identity |
| Museum family workshop | Gallery response postcards | Observation & dialogue |
| Teacher CPD session | Staff memory wall of teaching moments | Professional reflection |
By integrating these small,repeatable practices,educators can turn the “memory cabinet” from a one‑off art activity into a long‑term framework for how learners encounter,sort and hold on to experience. Over time, the growing collections become visual evidence of intellectual risk‑taking and emotional investment-archives that students and visitors can revisit, re‑curate and even dismantle as their perspectives evolve.
In Retrospect
As “Memory Cabinet-Making Our Memories Physical” opens its doors in London, it does more than showcase a new chapter in Hauser & Wirth’s Education Lab programme-it tests how far an art space can go in reframing the act of remembering itself. By inviting visitors to externalize, arrange, and even question their own memories, the project shifts the gallery from a site of contemplation to one of active construction.In a city already steeped in history and personal narratives, the Education Lab’s arrival underscores how crucial such participatory platforms have become. Here, memory is not an archive to be preserved intact, but a living, editable material-something that can be handled, shared, and reimagined in public.
Whether the “Memory Cabinet” ultimately feels like a mirror, a workshop, or a communal diary will depend on those who step inside it. But its presence in London signals a broader move toward educational spaces that blur the lines between artist, institution, and audience-inviting everyone to take part in the ongoing work of making the intangible visible.