National Maritime Museum Cornwall and Royal Museums Greenwich Present PIRATES
20 March 2023
Major new exhibition opens 31 March 2023
PIRATES opens at National Maritime Museum Cornwall this spring in a major new exhibition exploring the history and cultural legacy of everyone’s favourite anti-hero.
Dashing and daring or bloodthirsty and greedy – were pirates of the 18 th century heroes of the age or nothing more than callous cut-throats? For generations, pirates have been portrayed in fiction, film, art and fashion as symbols of freedom, adventure and transgression. Despite the
often-brutal reality of pirate life, they are still celebrated. But how and why has this image been created?
From the perceived ‘Golden Age’ of piracy through to the myriad of ways that pirate identity has been consumed and appropriated through the years, PIRATES asks audiences to jump on board and uncover how a small group of robbers became the most unlikely of folk heroes.
From the Pirates of Penzance and Captain Hook, through to LGBTQ+ interpretations of pirates and piracy-inspired catwalk collections, audiences will be invited to meet the man who inspired Long John Silver, land on Treasure Island, and dance a hornpipe with Horatio Pugwash, before discovering the dark world of the real pirates of the Caribbean. Spanning from the 17 th century to the present day, the show will also feature an immersive experience of the Sea of Thieves game, specially created for NMMC by Microsoft development studio, Rare.
Co-produced in association with Royal Museums Greenwich (where the exhibition will open in 2025), the rich array of objects on display at NMMC will include costumes, weapons, globes, maps, telescopes, first edition publications, film posters and illustrations. Highlights include original artwork from Captain Pugwash, a reproduction of the very first costume for Captain Hook and real ‘pieces of eight’ on loan from the British Museum.
Filled with fascinating facts and sensory experiences, this major exhibition explores how popular culture has shaped how we think of pirates today, diving beneath the surface to uncover the timber-shivering truth. An accompanying events programme including Cultural Lates and a Skull Island play zone will be presented alongside the main exhibition.
Richard Doughty, Director of National Maritime Museum Cornwall, said:
“In a unique collaboration between National Maritime Museum Cornwall and Royal Museums Greenwich, this major exhibition is our most ambitious undertaking to date. It sheds new light on the pirate story, challenging what visitors think they know about the lives of pirates and explores how cultural myths are created, by drawing on the wealth of iterations in popular culture, literature, and film. Tracing the appeal of pirates over the past three centuries, the show shines a light on why this form of outlaw has persisted as a popular symbol of freedom, despite the brutal reality of the pirate life.”
PIRATES is curated by guest curator Dr Eric Kentley and the NMMC curatorial project team, Dr Helen Doe, Andrew Motion, Alexis McDavid, Dr Rebecca Simon, Stuart Slade.
Find out more here
About National Maritime Museum Cornwall:
Located on Discovery Quay, in Falmouth on the South Cornwall coast, National Maritime Museum Cornwall has 15 galleries over five floors. With a collection that spans The National Small Boat collection, exciting temporary exhibitions, artworks, maps and charts, memorabilia and other objects, and a boatbuilding workshop, the museum celebrates and explores the overwhelming influence of the sea on history and culture, bringing new and diverse perspectives to maritime issues, and highlighting their relevance to the present day. Winner of the 2014 Telegraph Family Friendly Museum Award and ‘Best Gallery’ at the 2017 What’s on Cornwall Awards