Is age really just a number?
Across the globe, people are living longer than at any other time in history. This is due to better housing, education and nutrition.
Medical and technological advances have dramatically reduced childhood deaths and more people are expected to live longer.
At the same time, people are choosing not to have children, or to have fewer, later in life.
These changes are reshaping our societies all over the world.
Longer lives can bring enormous benefits to individuals and communities, but they also raise new challenges. For example, living longer means you might have to manage illnesses.
Does everyone get to live a longer life? It depends.
Government campaigns, adverts and media stories all encourage us to make healthy lifestyle choices. They put the responsibility on individuals to “age well”. You have to think for yourself.
But having longer lives and better health isn’t easy. It can depend on a range of social and economic factors. For example, your home environment, wealth and access to services will all impact your lifespan.
This exhibition explores what increased longevity means for all of us.
It questions our assumptions about age, from adolescence through mid-life to older age. For example, you might think young people are naïve, or that old people are less important.
Why do we hold these attitudes?
We all want to age well and have a good long life. What needs to change for us to achieve that?