As societies around the world grapple with increasing life expectancy, the Wellcome Collection in London is preparing to launch a groundbreaking exhibition that challenges how we perceive getting older. “The Coming of Age,” scheduled to open in March 2026, will be the first large-scale museum exhibition to explore the complete journey of aging from adolescence through later life.
The exhibition will showcase more than 120 works spanning from the 16th century to the present day, bringing together art, scientific research, and popular culture. Among the notable pieces is Sebald Beham’s 1536 woodcut depicting elders being rejuvenated by a fountain of youth, illustrating humanity’s longstanding obsession with reversing the aging process.
Through centuries of art and science, humanity’s quest to defeat aging reveals our eternal struggle against time’s inevitable march.
Visitors will encounter a variety of media including prints, paintings, photography, film, and advertising. Historical items such as 1930s Kellogg’s All-Bran advertisements promising youthfulness demonstrate how consumer culture has long commodified anti-aging narratives and reinforced stereotypes about older bodies.
The exhibition addresses a pressing demographic reality: approximately one in ten UK children born today are expected to live to 100 years old. This fact underscores the urgency of reconsidering how societies can help everyone age better while addressing persistent inequalities in health outcomes.
Rather than focusing on individual responsibility for aging “well,” the curatorial approach emphasizes collective responsibility and structural change. The exhibition highlights how factors such as income, gender, race, and geography produce unequal aging outcomes throughout the life course. Suzanne Lacy’s compelling project “Uncertain Futures” specifically addresses the inequalities for women over 50 through a powerful combination of art, activism, and research.
By juxtaposing historical artifacts with contemporary works, “The Coming of Age” exposes shifting ideas about youth, decline, care, and dignity. This approach challenges cultural stereotypes and repositions aging as a complex, multi-stage process shaped by social factors rather than simply a biological inevitability.
The museum ensures that all visitors can fully engage with the exhibition through its comprehensive accessibility features, including step-free access, wheelchair-friendly facilities, and specialized guides for visually impaired attendees.
Positioned as one of London’s most anticipated exhibitions of 2026, this flagship spring show aims to provoke meaningful discussions about how we comprehend and experience the full spectrum of human aging.