Inside “Wes Anderson: The Archives”: 700 Objects from 30 Years of Filmmaking at London’s Design Museum

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Written by Flynn Matthews

2025-11-26

The Design Museum in London has opened Wes Anderson: The Archives, a large survey of the director’s personal materials. It runs from November 21, 2025 to July 26, 2026. More than 700 objects appear across the galleries, with over 300 pieces added specifically for the London stop.

Visitors walk straight into a three-meter model of the Grand Budapest Hotel. The candy-pink facade once sat on a film set; now it dominates the room and gives a quick sense of the scale Anderson works at. It isn’t a replica. It’s the real piece used during production.

Rat from Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)

Anderson began holding onto props after Bottle Rocket (1996), when most of that film’s material disappeared. Since Rushmore (1998) he has boxed up almost everything—costumes, miniatures, notebooks, and the small objects that would normally be tossed at wrap. The museum received access to this archive through a long collaboration with La Cinémathèque française.

The show follows a loose timeline from the 1990s through The Phoenician Scheme (2025). Hand-drawn storyboards sit next to Polaroids. There are spiral notebooks with clipped pages, pen marks, and scene ideas that never made it into the final cuts. Each film gets a separate room or alcove, which helps break the visual monotony.

Isle of Dogs (2018)

Objects from The Phoenician Scheme (2025)

More than twenty items from Anderson’s latest film are displayed publicly for the first time. A Dunhill pipe, a jewelled dagger made by Harumi Klossowska de Rola, and several small props that appear only briefly on screen. The film’s main character, Anatole “Zsa-zsa” Korda, is written as a collector, and the curators point out the obvious parallel.

Featuring costumes worn by Ralph Fiennes as concierge Gustave H and Tilda Swinton as Madame D

Highlights from the earlier films

The exhibition brings together the “Boy with Apple” painting, costumes worn by Ralph Fiennes and Tilda Swinton, and the Asteroid City vending machines. The marine puppets from The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004) are still impressive up close; the paintwork looks almost wet.

Costumes fill several cases. Milena Canonero’s designs for The Grand Budapest Hotel appear with uniforms from Rushmore, the Zissou crew’s full outfits, and garments worn by actors including Scarlett Johansson, Bill Murray, Owen Wilson, Benicio del Toro, Jason Schwartzman, and Jeffrey Wright.

Stop-motion work gets its own section. Puppets from Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009) stand alongside early prototypes for Isle of Dogs (2018). Mr. Fox’s tiny corduroy suit is displayed with the stitching visible under the lights.

Fantastic Mr. Fox (2009)

Short films included

Visitors can watch Bottle Rocket (1993), Hotel Chevalier (2007), Castello Cavalcanti (2013), and The Swan (2023). The original Bottle Rocket short plays at its full 14 minutes. It’s rarely accessible and may be the most personal item in the entire show.

Asteroid City (2023)

Collaborative work on display

Another part of the exhibition turns toward the people who help shape Anderson’s films: illustrators Javi Aznarez and Eric Chase Anderson, composers Alexandre Desplat and Randall Poster, production designers Mark Friedberg and Adam Stockhausen, costume designer Milena Canonero, model maker Simon Weisse, puppet fabricator Andy Gent, and others. Their sketches and unused materials show how much of the visual language is built in conversation.

Model of Deep Search, Steve Zissou’s submarine

Design Museum director Tim Marlow notes that Anderson’s detailed approach comes from a strong understanding of design, which made the museum a natural host for the project.

Expanded material for the London edition

The Paris version established the core of the exhibition, but the London show adds hundreds of extra objects. Fabrics, paint swatches, miniature engineering samples, and reference boards give a clearer sense of how each film’s world was constructed.

The catalogue produced for the exhibition includes new essays and interviews with Anderson and several long-time collaborators, including Owen Wilson, Scarlett Johansson, Jason Schwartzman, Tilda Swinton, Alexandre Desplat, Seu Jorge, and Randall Poster.

Isle of Dogs (2018)
Fantastic Mr. Fox figure
Figures from Isle of Dogs (2018)
washing machines from Isle of Dogs | image by Richard Round-Turner © the Design Museum
Tracy’s puppet (detail), Arch Model Studio, ISLE OF DOGS | image by Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Wes Anderson with the model of the Grand Budapest Hotel © Thierry Stefanopoulos – La Cinémathèque française
Major Domo, Isle of Dogs (2018)
Wes Anderson’s personal notebooks from THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS. Photo by Roger Do Minh. © Wes Anderson
THE FRENCH DISPATCH magazine. Photo Roger Do Minh. © the Design Museum
Dunhill pipe and a jeweled dagger crafted by artist Harumi Klossowska de Rola
Sam Shakuski’s Scout kit, MOONRISE KINGDOM. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Miniature model and sign of the train, THE DARJEELING LIMITED, and blackboard depicting the Solar System, ASTEROID CITY. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Costumes and objects from Moonrise Kingdom (2012)
Richie Tenenbaum poster, THE ROYAL TENENBAUMS. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Costumes and creatures from The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou (2004)
François Voltaire suitcases of the Whitman brothers. Marc Jacobs for Louis Vuitton. Wildlife print designed by Eric Chase Anderson. THE DARJEELING LIMITED | image by Roger Do Minh. © the Design Museum
Miniature motorcycle of Mr. Fox, Arch Model Studio, FANTASTIC MR. FOX. Photo Richard Round-Turner. © the Design Museum
Vending machines, Atelier Simon Weisse from Asteroid City | image by Richard Round-Turner © the Design Museum
All images by Luke Hayes, unless stated otherwise
Costume from The Darjeeling Limited (2007)