Why is Docklands’ Romani exhibition exposing a hidden history now?

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A hush of anticipation meets a storm of questions as London’s Docklands unveils By Appointment Only, a new exhibition at the London Museum Docklands in West India Quay that dares to lift the veil on Romani creativity, craft, and resilience. Three British Romani artists—Corrina Eastwood, Delaine Le Bas, and Dan Turner—present work that challenges stereotypes and invites the public into a dialogue long overdue. The show isn’t just about art; it’s a doorway into memory, lineage, and belonging that the capital is only beginning to acknowledge.

Why now? The exhibition arrives with a history mapped as stark and instructive as the pieces themselves. Romani communities were first documented in Britain in the early 1500s, a history that includes signs in pubs and restaurants reading ‘No travellers or gypsies allowed’—a phrase that later morphed into ‘Travellers by appointment only.’ This title becomes a meta-quotation that the curators use to propel reflection as much as display. Corrina Eastwood has described the project as a “really important personal and professional journey,” explaining that the team sought to honour self, family, community and culture by weaving together shared histories through traditional archiving and an art-based approach. The personal becomes political, and the political becomes intimate, through art that speaks across generations.

Eastwood’s piece, Sugar Coated, uses 3D-printed casts of her late father’s hands to anchor memory in material form, while Le Bas’s Tap Your Heels Together Three Times explores belonging, gender and modernity, drawing on rag-and-bone traditions and family history. Turner’s work interrogates the relationship between Romani and mainstream British culture, highlighting traditional crafts once sold door to door. Alongside the artworks, the Historic England film Searching for Romani Gypsy Heritage, created by John-Henry Phillips, traces Romani history from 500AD to 2022, offering contextual depth to the exhibition’s intimate pieces.

The exhibition is housed in a space the organizers describe as a “beautifully human alternative space” for acknowledging important, often unspoken histories. The Reflections Room on the second floor, which is free to visit alongside the rest of the museum, invites visitors to sit with memory as part of a broader public conversation. The show’s aim is clear: to challenge stereotypes, to foster understanding, and to connect Romani communities with a wider British audience. This is not simply about display; it is about dialogue, heritage, and a rethinking of what belonging means in contemporary Britain.

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