David Bowie died in 2016, but he is still on tour, selling out shows around the world.
An exhibition of audio, video, costumes, and a remarkable trove of personal mementos from the archives of the late-musicianβs career, assembled under the title David Bowie Is landed in the late-musiciansβ adopted hometown of New York this past weekend, at the Brooklyn Museum. Running through July 15, the exhibition is the last stop on a five year world tour that began at the Victoria & Albert Museum in London in 2012, and has included stops in ten cities across five continents.
While the list of countries visited is remarkable enough, whatβs truly staggering is the fact that nearly two million people have attended the exhibition; further proof not only of Bowieβs enduring appeal, but of the increasingly creative ways musicians are reaching their fans beyond just their music.
βIt really has exceeded all of our expectations,β says Geoffrey Marsh, one of the curators of the original V&A exhibition. βItβs an amazing and exciting way for David Bowieβs fansβand even people just discovering himβto connect with him in a unique and extraordinary and completely immersive way.β

In 1969, when The Beatles were in the midst of splitting, John Lennon had grand plans for his new venture with his wife Yoko Ono, which the couple dubbed Plastic Ono Band. AΒ homebody by nature, rather than βjoining the traveling flea circus,β as he once called the life of a performing rock-and-roller, Lennon envisioned sending his latest record, along with wax figures, cardboard cutouts, or even a diorama of a band, on tour instead.
With stadium rock concerts in their infancy, but gaining steam as a way for musicians to generate tremendous income, Lennonβs idea that anything less than a personal appearance would draw a crowd seemed a fanciful scheme. Not surprisingly, it took more than forty years and someone with the audacity and vision like Lennonβs close friend Bowie to actually pull off the idea.
The idea for David Bowie Is was hatched by the V&A more than four years before the artistβs death. But true to form, itβs an ahead-of-the-curve demonstration of the way rock starsβdead or aliveβcan keep the public interested (and the dollars rolling in) beyond the typical album-concert tour-album cycle. A far cry from the few guitars from disparate artists on the wall of your local Hard Rock Cafe, or even the photo exhibits from rockβs heyday that have become the rage, rock and rollβs elite are doing what Lennon envisioned more than forty years ago: Theyβre sending memorabilia on the road.
The Rolling Stonesβ Exhibitionism drew substantial crowds to a New York show last year featuring not much more than stage clothes and guitars, while former Oasis kingpin Noel Gallagher has a small but fantastic pre-concert exhibit of his handwritten lyrics, awards, and memorabilia for fans willing to pay a small charge above the standard ticket price on his current tour. But itβs taken Bowie, and fellow UK rock pioneers Pink Floyd, with their recent sold-out V&A show Their Mortal Remains, now in Rome, to really make the idea work.
Both Bowie and Pink Floyd carved individual and unique paths in their creative journeys, blending audio, video and artistic elements. Fittingly, the respective exhibits draw on the richβalthough vastly differentβvisual elements the artists used throughout their careers.
Much like Bowie, βPink Floyd evolved into something that was more than just their music,β says Ray Winkler, the CEO and Design Director of Stufish, a UK design firm, and also the exhibition architect of the Pink Floyd exhibit. Their music βwas synonymous with a very strong visual language. That gave us so much to tap into.β
Winkler says this catalog of visuals was βindependent ofβand sort of ran in parallel withβthe bandβs musical career, and that helped us tell the story.β

Both shows are completely absorbing experiences. Mike Garson, Bowieβs pianist for much of his career, who is now on tour with Celebrating David Bowie, featuring a band of Bowie alums, advises taking at least two hours to see David Bowie Is.
βThe immersive, audio-video nature of the exhibitβnot just the costumes and memorabilia, which are stunning, too, of courseβmake it a really special experience,β says Garson, who will perform at a free concert at the David Bowie Is exhibition on April 7. βI saw one screen of us performing somewhere, with David singing and me on the keyboards, and I thought, βIβve never seen that. Oh, my God.β It made him come alive again.β
Thatβs exactly the feeling the Brooklyn Museum was hoping to accomplish with their version of David Bowie Is, says its director of exhibition design, Matthew Yokobosky, a lifelong Bowie fan. Yokobosky visited previous incarnations of the exhibition and says he has tried to give the Brooklyn edition a heightened chronological flow, with a more New York-centric flavor, as well as a greater focus on the artistβs time recording in Philadelphia in the mid-70s.
The exhibit features more than 100 never-before-seen items from Bowieβs archive, from the giant letters used on Bowieβs βfive boroughβ tour of New York City after Sept. 11, which greet you upon entering the exhibit, to his pre-production notesβand even the black-starred, leather-bound bookβfrom his final music video. βI grew up with David Bowie, so heβs very real to me, even though heβs gone. A lot of people coming to the show will not have that same connection,β Yokobosky says. βSo it was important for us to put David Bowie in the here and nowβin the present tenseβand I think thatβs what people will take away from the show.β
Yokobosky also says that, even as a diehard fan, he was surprised at how large Bowieβs influence looms.βDavid Bowieβs impact as an artist is enormous, and certainly much bigger than I realized before we started working on this show,β he says. βHe is still everywhere.β
Visitors to David Bowie Is are enveloped in the late-artistβs world from the moment they enter the exhibition. Upon entering, theyβre given a pair of headphones that, as they move around from station to station, offer narration from Bowie himself, as well as a soundtrack curated by Bowieβs longtime producer Tony Visconti.

Sennheiser designed the unique technology crucial to making David Bowie Is the emotional journey it is, which spokesman Robert Genereux describes as a more sophisticated and precise process than geolocation. βIt detects where you are in the exhibit, and as youβre walking through it, the receiver says, βOkay, this person is in this zone, looking at a World War II ration book, so letβs play the file of David Bowie talking about his early life, and growing up in post-War Britain.β
The audio component is what really brings Bowieβs being and art to life, and itβs that sort of attention to detail, not to mention such Bowie-like use of state-of-the-art technology, that sets this exhibit apart from your typical museum-going experience.
βThe breadth of David Bowieβs work and lifeβmusician, painter, actor, writer, fashion and gay rights iconβwas staggering to me when I first got involved with this project,β the V&As Victoria Broakes, who curated the original exhibition with Marsh, confesses. βWeβre a museum of art, design and form, so the visual is incredibly important. I quickly came to realize that Bowieβs work was far more suited to this sort of exhibition, because he chose influences from such a wide range of artistic and cultural ideas. He was like a sort of walking encyclopedia; a conduit for his public to the ideas that inspired and moved him, whether those were German expressionism or Japanese kabuki, Stanley Kubrick or Fritz Lang. He was out experiencing those things, and then putting them into his work.β
When the exhibition opened in 2012, Β βit was an incredible moment,β Broakes says. βIt became something picked up by live performers who suddenly thought, βOh, thatβs interesting. Here is a way to go on tour without leaving the country, in a way that gives a real sort of breadth and depth to the work that I do.β But I donβt think itβs possible for just any performer, of course.β
Ray Winkler, who worked with Pink Floyd to create a similar, immersive experience, agrees that while exhibitions like Their Mortal Remains and David Bowie Is could be an easy way for aging artists to go on tour without actually hitting the road, and that art school-influenced bands like The Beatles and The Who might be ripe for similar shows, the medium is not right for every artist. Ultimately, he feels that it is artists like Pink Floyd and Bowie, who pushed the boundaries of pop and rock music in ways and mediums unimaginable to their peers, who make the best subjects for such projects.
βThey were not just great artists, they were artists who really knew their craft, and so these exhibitions show how they beautifully wove together their incredible talent for music with an incredible talent to express that in some visual manner,β Winkler says. βJust having the time to reflect on some of these things, in a world where bands disappear like melting snowβitβs nice to see something that had real substance and survived beyond the lifespan of the artists themselves,β he adds. βThat is what museums do best: They put these things into a time capsule that allows you to look at it at your own pace, in a world that is increasingly pressing the fast forward button, and to think about what amazing work these truly unique artists created.β