This is Tomorrow

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"This is Tomorrow" was a seminal art exhibition in August 1956 at the Whitechapel Art Gallery. The core of the exhibition was the Independent Group. It was conceived by architectural critic Theo Crosby who had attended a congress in Paris in 1954 on the drawing together of fine and applied arts. The exhibition included artists, architects, musicians and graphic designers working together in 12 teams, an example of multi-disciplinary collaboration that was still unusual. Each group took as their starting point the human senses and the theme of habitation. The exhibitions most remembered exhibit was the room by Richard Hamilton, John Voelcker and John McHale. It included a film advertising billboard of the Forbidden Planet, Robby the Robot and a Jukebox provided by McHale. The catalogue also featured essays by Reyner Banham and Lawrence Alloway. Colin St John Wilson designed the exhibition guide; Edward Wright designed the catalogue for This Is Tomorrow, and it was printed by Lund Humphries.

The TIT show is now considered a watershed in post-war British Art and in some respects kick started the development of the British arm of Pop Art.

Parts of This is Tomorrow were recreated in 1990 for an exhibition at the Institute of Contemporary Arts.

[edit] Artist Teams in Exhibition

[edit] External links

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