Design and Disability: exhibition guide

Design and Disability showcases the radical contributions of Disabled, Deaf, and neurodivergent people to contemporary design and culture from the 1940s to now. 

The exhibition shows how Disabled people have designed for every aspect of life through their own experience and expertise, tracing the political and social history of design and disability. 170 objects will be on display across three sections – Visibility, Tools and Living spanning design, art, architecture, fashion, and photography.

The exhibition will also explore the rich history of Disabled designers challenging ableism in the design industry, as well as the practitioners working today to 'hack' pre-existing design to make it more usable.

About the exhibition

Design and Disability begins with a rest space for visitors to orient themselves and address any access needs. A tactile map, audio description and BSL welcome will be available to visitors, as well as a sensory map, large print, and plain English guides.

Section 1: Visibility

The exhibition's first section, Visibility, will explore how Disabled makers visualise and express their own identities across fashion, photography, demonstrations, graphic design and zine culture. Highlights include the hypervisual ensemble by designer and activist Sky Cubacub, including their gender-affirming, adaptive garment Rebirth Garments Binder, and a handmade Notting Hill Carnival Costume inspired by Sandro Botticelli's The Birth of Venus, sewn by Maya Scarlette, a fashion designer with ectrodactyly.

(Left to Right:) Rebirth Garments. Photo by Colectivo Multipolar. © Colectivo Multipolar; 'The Birth of Venus’ carnival costume by Maya Scarlette, 2024. © Shot by Tanasha Chege

Photography in this section will include Marvel Harris' self-portrait 'First Swim after Rebirth', a joyous self-portrait taken following gender-affirming surgery. As an autistic person who has dealt with issues of self-acceptance, well-being and gender identity, it celebrates Disabled joy. Also on display will be a portrait by Scallywag Fox of performer Davina Starr, a member of Drag Syndrome Collective, the world's first drag troop featuring drag Queens and Kings with Down's Syndrome.

'First Swim after Rebirth', 2018. Image from the series 'Inner Journey, 2014–ongoing. © Marvel Harris, courtesy of the artist

The power of grassroots and digital communities will be celebrated through the display of graphic design and typography including zines such as Able Zine and Bed Zine. Another example of editorial representation of disability is Dysfluent Magazine, which uses graphic and font design by Conor Foran to represent how people who stammer speak, de-stigmatising stammering, and actively taking pride in it. Derived from the word 'dysfluency', meaning a disruption in the flow of speech, the typeface repeats or stretches letterforms, giving stammering its own visual identity.

Dysfluent Magazine Issue 2, 2023. © Photo Courtesy of the artist and designer Conor Foran

Section 2: Tools

The second section, Tools, will explore the creativity of Disabled people in adapting and subverting designed objects to suit a greater diversity of access needs. This section challenges the way society views Disabled people as passive users of design, instead focusing on their inventing, breaking, adapting and 'hacking' the designed world for themselves.

On display will be the Touchstream keyboard by Fingerworks (2005) by Wayne Westerman, a technology which revolutionised the tech industry and was later used in the iPhone 1. Other examples of tools in this section include the first Microsoft Xbox Adaptive Controller 2018 as well as a selection of hacked prosthetics including silicone cutlery holders and eyeliner holders used at home by Cindy Garni. Simple, clever, and ultimately more useful to Cindy than her expensive robotic hand, the prosthetics have challenged and expanded our ideas of engineering.

(Left to Right:) Fork for Cindy suspended in a silicone cap. © Photo by Michael J. Maloney; Cindy demonstrates her use of an eyeliner adapted with rubber tubing. © Photo by Michael J. Maloney

This section will also look at the relationship between design and disability across the world. On display will be photographs taken by Simon Way, which document Jaipur Foot, who make free prosthetic legs, feet and arms for millions of people across India, many of whom became Disabled because of landmines, war, illnesses like polio, or railway accidents.

Jaipur Foot, 1981. © Photo by Simon Way

Section 3: Living

The final section Living will explore how Disabled people have imagined the worlds that they want to live in through design, and how they have affected change in the environment around them through protest. It will explore how Disabled people have advocated for access and design through artistic interventions and solidarity movements, such as the Anti-Stairs Club by Finnegan Shannon and Camp Jened.

Disabled People Fight Back banner (2014). © Courtesy of People's History Museum

Highlight objects in this section include the McGonagle Reader, an audio-assisted voting device to help Blind and low vision people to vote independently, and 'Public S/Pacing' by Helen Stratford, a rest blanket for use in public spaces. Also on display will be The Squeeze Chaise Longue (1997), a recliner developed by artist Wendy Jacobs, which embraces the sitter between two red mohair arms, providing comforting sensory feedback for those who appreciate deep pressure stimulation.

Squeeze chair by Wendy Jacobs and Temple Grandin, 1995. © Photo by Ted Diamond

The finale of this section is a specially designed decompression zone, for self-regulation, reflection, and rest. The area will include comfortable seats, a collection of objects designed by occupational therapists, many of them Disabled themselves, as well as an installation by artist Seo Hye Lee, which uses creative, emotive subtitling to reimagine archival film.

Design and Disability is on at V&A South Kensington from 7June 2025 – 15 February 2026.

Header image:
'The best lovers are good with their hands' by Harry McAuslan, issued by AIDS Ahead part of the British Deaf Association. © Victoria and Albert Museum, London