Well, it’s done and dusted for another year but what a major success and influential event it was! Here are some standout exhibitions and installations for 2025.
Quiet Studio, photo by Peter Bennetts.
May 29th, 2025
Melbourne Design Week again delivered outstanding design and was the impetus that brought so much talent together. Over the 11-day period, the city came alive with myriad exhibitions, inspiring talks and exquisite installations but underpinning everything was a collegiate atmosphere that strengthened the bonds of connection within the design community.
This was the chance for young and emerging designers to shine and for icons of architecture and design to demonstrate just why they are the best and, as visitors, we all had the opportunity to enjoy the experiences.
While the theme for Melbourne Design Week in 2025 was Design The World You Want, there was a plethora of interpretations that kept things interesting. One stream of consciousness were the many installations and events that explored the realm of wellbeing, mindfulness and sensory re-awakening.
Deep Calm: The Regulating Effect Of Pressure and Touch presented by Sibling Architecture investigated the therapeutic benefits of deep pressure that is often experienced through sensations of being hugged, held or squeezed.
During a 30-minute experience, visitors were asked to lay on custom-designed floor rugs between weighted overstuffed tubes of fabric or sofas that encircled them and to just relax. With a soundscape by Jeanette Litlle, the experience morphed into a hypnotic relax, almost too restful for some as many patrons drifted off to sleep.
Deep Calm was held at the Sibling Architecture Studio and SUKU Home attired helpers shepherded people in and out of the space before and after sessions. The room itself bathed in pink light became cavernous and lying there cossetted by the massive fabric tubes contributed to a feeling of wellbeing on another level.
Related: Jessie French at Aesop for MDW
This exhibition is the outcome of a year-long research project funded by Creative Victoria that investigates approaches to designing for the senses
On the other hand, Quiet Studio by Autex Acoustics, Studiobird and Universal Practice offered a place of interior architectural interest as well as respite and the chance to simply breathe deeply that was truly experiential.
Matthew Bird, principal Studiobird, re-imagined a vacant Collingwood shop into another world using Autex Acoustic’s carbon-neutral acoustic panelling as interior arches that enveloped the space and the visitor. The installation was sensational and the interior form all-encompassing with lighting effects that enhanced the space to great effect.
As a quiet place to recalibrate self, Breathwork sessions were on offer to help declutter the mind and delineate the outside from the inside. Thirty-minute relaxation sessions were conducted by Sammy Prouse, physiotherapist and founding director, Universal Practice and this was a chance to de-stress in the perfect aesthetic.
Extrapolating the theme of wellbeing and focusing on individual contemplation, of note was an exhibition, Being Sensitive, situated in the new workspace of Kennon in the spectacular Harry Seidler building in Spring Street.
Not only is the interior of the studio’s new abode fabulous but add to this a perfectly curated exhibition by the studio and this was an unexpected gem.
The exhibition included works from Hugh McCarthy, Bolaji Teniola, Studio Kaytar, Dasa Ceramics, kohl Tyler, Maya Collection, Outro and Sundance Studio, eight emerging local artists. The groupings of objects and architectural setting was sublime and evoked a restful atmosphere, located as it was high in the sky overlooking the city.
Other exhibitions around the city such as Soft by Calum Hurley and Andy TT and Seven Minutes In Heaven from Streifen, offered visitors immersive experiences, safe spaces and a chance to explore objects, ponder environments and become more mindful of self.
While many events this MDW were off the chart for excitement and stimulation, these exhibitions offered a deeper and more intimate experience through excellent design and personal contemplation.
Melbourne Design Week is over for another year, however, we look forward to MDW in 2026 and the creativity that will again inspire us all to look to design that makes such a statement on the national, regional and global stages.
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) and we thank them for investing in design and designers in an event that places Melbourne on the map as a global design city.
Melbourne Design Week
designweek.melbourne
Photography
Peter Bennetts (Quiet Studio)
Christine Francis (Deep Calm)
Jay Saya (Being Sensitive)
INDESIGN is on instagram
Follow @indesignlive
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
Welcomed to the Australian design scene in 2024, Kokuyo is set to redefine collaboration, bringing its unique blend of colour and function to individuals and corporations, designed to be used Any Way!
The new range features slabs with warm, earthy palettes that lend a sense of organic luxury to every space.
It’s widely accepted that nature – the original, most accomplished design blueprint – cannot be improved upon. But the exclusive Crypton Leather range proves that it can undoubtedly be enhanced, augmented and extended, signalling a new era of limitless organic materiality.
How can design empower the individual in a workplace transforming from a place to an activity? Here, Design Director Joel Sampson reveals how prioritising human needs – including agency, privacy, pause and connection – and leveraging responsive spatial solutions like the Herman Miller Bay Work Pod is key to crafting engaging and radically inclusive hybrid environments.
The new Heritage Loom Collection weaves past and present together to capture the spirit of iconic fabric construction
Director Ian Briggs is one of the longest serving members of the Plus team and – with a milestone rebrand complete and a Sydney event just yesterday – he walks us through the state of play at the practice in 2025.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
At Saltbox in Sydney, this year’s INDE winners – including a Best of the Best from Asia – were announced at an extravagant, fun Gala awards night.
The client’s brief was clear: create an environment that honoured FIN’s heritage while embracing its future. For Intermain, that meant rejecting the idea of the corporate, “boring” office and instead leaning into a space that would inspire, connect, and surprise.