Wish you were here? V&A museum puts Pink Floyd on show
LONDON — The Victoria & Albert Museum’s new exhibition is a psychedelic time capsule of a show devoted to the band Pink Floyd, complete with floating pigs, surreal animations and trippy projections.
But it’s not the visuals, or the group’s experimental and sometimes indulgent music, that marks this out as an ode to a vanished time. It’s the economics.
Pink Floyd was given limitless studio time to create sprawling albums that sold in the tens of millions. The band staged multimedia shows so huge and technically ambitious that the set for one tour took eight days to assemble.
Aubrey “Po” Powell, a founder of the Hipgnosis design team behind Pink Floyd’s most famous album covers, said the exhibition celebrates “a 25-year golden period when album sales were through the roof and the industry was awash with money to allow renegades to be able to expand.”


