Featuring a dazzling showcase of 100 elegant and avant-garde contemporary lights, furniture designed for neurodivergent audiences and leading designers and brands from across the country, Australia’s premier design festival Melbourne Design Week returns from 15 – 25 May 2025 offering a vital platform for creatives to showcase boundary-pushing work and test new ideas.
“Now in its ninth year Melbourne Design Week is a vital platform for designers from across the country and the Asia-Pacific region to share ambitious ideas and new works that will shape the future for the better,” said Tony Ellwood AM, Director NGV.
Over 11 days and 350+ events, exhibitions, talks, and installations, Melbourne Design Week will celebrate the depth and richness of design talent in the region from a new crop of emerging talent to the industry’s most well-respected and established professionals. The reoccurring theme of ‘Design the world you want’ invites designers showing in the festival to consider how their creative output shapes the future.
Highlights include: A New Normal – an exhibition of designs to make Melbourne a self-sufficient city by 2030; a retrospective exhibition of lighting designer Volker Haug marking 20 years of designing and making in Australia; plus presentations by the country’s leading showrooms, studios and makers including Trent Jansen, Coco Flip, Jessie French, Fiona Lynch, Tait, Cult and more.
Melbourne Design Week is an initiative of the Victorian Government through Creative Victoria and is curated and delivered by the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV). Melbourne Design Week continues to thrive year on year welcoming over 100,000 visitors to the 2024 festival, making it Australia’s largest design event.
An exhibition of 100 Lights will illuminate North Melbourne’s sweeping Meat Market Stables in a visually spectacular display of lighting designs by 100 artists, designers, and makers staged by Friends & Associates. Visitors will be immersed in a glowing environment replete with lamps, pendants and sconces made by emerging to late career practitioners including Adam Goodrum, Ross Gardam, Tantri Mustika, Marlo Lyda, Jay Jermyn and many more.
Two icons of the Australian industry, decorative lighting designer Volker Haug and furniture designer Trent Jansen, will mark 20 years of designing and making in Australia and innovative practice with retrospective exhibitions reflecting on their design legacies.
Hailing from Stuttgart, Germany, Haug moved to Melbourne in the early 2000s and founded his eponymous label which has established a reputation for blending functionality with artistic expression. To mark this career milestone the studio will present 20 Years of Volker Haug Studios – a display of the brand’s most significant designs tracing the evolution of Haug’s design philosophy from early works to his most iconic pieces.
Recognised as one of Australia’s most accomplished designers, Trent Jansen’s career will be surveyed in an exhibition titled Trent Jansen: Two Decades of Design Anthropology. The exhibition will traverse his early works repurposing road signs into stools to his ground-breaking collaborations with First Nations makers such as designers Johnny Nargoodah, Errol Evans and Tanya Singer, and artist Maree Clark.
Further highlights include Sibling Architecture’s Deep Calm, an exhibition that is the culmination of a year-long research project into how architecture can cater for neurodivergent audiences. Weighted sofas and tactile rugs designed by Sibling will create the calming effect of deep pressure widely used by occupational therapists working with children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) to reduce symptoms of stress and anxiety.
A New Normal will present designs and policy recommendations by 12 Melbourne architects in an exhibition at the Boyd Baker Compound in Bacchus Marsh. Concepts proposed to transform Melbourne include a water treatment plant by MUIR in the form of public sculpture installed in local communities, Baracco + Wright’s proposal to transform abandoned buildings across the city into mixed-use spaces with residential housing, and NH’s waste-to-energy facility attached to local sports facilities.
A New Normal won the Melbourne Design Week Award when it was presented on the rooftop of a high rise building in 2021. Architects Kennedy Nolan and NMBW have both completed projects utilising concepts from the 2021 exhibition and the project has gone on to be developed for Sydney, Perth and Guadalajara, Mexico.
The 11th iteration of the Melbourne Art Book Fair brings together the best publishers and designers from the Asia-Pacific region from 16 – 18 May at NGV International. The fair plays host to over 100 publishers in the Great Hall where visitors can browse booths, limited edition books, prints, magazines and more.
In 2025 the Fair features a strong presence from South East Asian publishers including Cahyati Press (Indonesia), Spacebar Zine (Thailand), and Suburbia Projects (Malaysia), along with leading and emerging publishers from New Zealand.
As part of the Melbourne Art Book Fair satellite program an exhibition of acclaimed New Zealand artist, designer and typographer Catherine Griffiths’ 40-year practice will explore the intersection of typography and language in public space.
During the stallholder fair, local children’s book authors will lead Kids storytime sessions reading newly released books gathered under Yayoi Kusama’s towering Dancing Pumpkin sculpture in Federation Court.
The presentation at the Design Gallery, Melbourne School of Design marks the largest exhibition of Griffiths’ work ever presented in Australia. Comme des Garçons will present a pop-up Book Stand featuring talks and publications from a selection of local publishers and communication designers in their Melbourne flagship store. A complimentary bookmark designed by Comme des Garçons will be available exclusively during Melbourne Design Week.
Designer talks by the Dancing Pumpkin will engage Sarah Lynn Rees, Danielle Brustman, Fiona Lynch and Jessie French in pop-up talks with NGV Curator Timothy Moore at NGV International to discuss themes of memory and materials.
Returning to the theme of design and death for a second year, Open House Melbourne will present Beyond the Grave – a two-day symposium focused on the architecture, places, issues and practices associated with the end of life.
The symposium will commence at the Shrine of Remembrance, reflecting on the role of memorials in urban planning and the future of cemetery design. This will be followed by workshops guiding participants to plan a memorial and a floral design workshop focused on how to honour a loved one.
The Melbourne Design Week Film Festival offers an opportunity to be immersed in design through a series of films curated by Spiros Economopoulos and screened at Lido and Classic Cinemas. Highlights include documentaries on leading female architect of the Modernist Movement Eileen Gray, and Arthur Erickson, a leading architect whose iconic and queer legacy is little known in this country.
Highlighting the design ingenuity and legacy of First Nations designers, Artbank and Agency Projects will present Catch: Tales of First Nations fishing through the Artbank Collection – an exhibition of fish traps by practitioners including Aunty Kim Wandin.
“The Allan Labor Government is proud to support Melbourne Design Week 2025, delivered by the NGV, which will explore the vital role design plays in all of our lives now and into the future. We encourage the design community and everyone interested in the power of good design to get involved,” said The Hon. Colin Brooks, Minister for Creative Industries.
Melbourne Design Week takes place 15 – 25 May 2025 at NGV International, St Kilda Road, Melbourne and at various locations throughout metropolitan and regional Victoria. The full program will be available online from mid-April 2025. For more information, visit: designweek.melbourne for details.
Images: Installation view of Material Matters presented by Beta by STH BNK and Atelier on display as part of Melbourne Design Week 2024 – photo by Kayla May Petty-Kook | Fire Trees, Volker Haug Studio – photo by Paul Allister | Render of Deep Calm by Sibling Architecture | Pumpkin Storytime – photo by Selina Ou | Living Together: The Story of De Warren