Olympicopolis: Dr Roth wants V&A to think bigger than ever

And how the new show, Disobedient Objects, will bring cobblestones and gas masks to London

The Victoria & Albert Museum
(Image credit: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)

Enough of the virtual - it's time to bring this column back to the tangible with a trip to the Victoria & Albert Museum to chat with its German-born director, Martin Roth. Earlier this month the V&A launched its campaign to save the Wolsey Angels and this week sees the opening of another ground-breaking V&A show, Disobedient Objects.

Roth is the first non-Briton ever to have run the museum – and, for that matter, to head up any national British museum. I met him earlier this year at the World Economic Forum in Davos and remembered most his passion for the role museums can play in challenging our ideas about the present - not just the past.

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Edie Lush is a journalist and communications coach. She is executive editor of Hub Culture and has been associate editor of Spectator Business, a political analyst for Hedge Fund Omega Partners and UBS, and a reporter for Bloomberg Television.