Kew Gardens launches exclusive new retail collection to celebrate landmark Henry Moore exhibition

Release date: 5 May 2026

Sandalwood & Cedar Soap

This spring, Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew will unveil an exclusive new retail collection inspired by one of the most significant art exhibitions in its history. Launching in tandem with the highly anticipated Henry Moore: Monumental Nature experience on 9 May, this new, highly anticipated collection will be available both online and in-store at the Galleries Gift Shop within the Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical Art.

Monumental Nature marks the largest-ever outdoor presentation of works by Henry Moore, one of the most influential and internationally recognised artists of the 20th century. Monumental Nature brings together 30 sculptures across Kew’s UNESCO World Heritage landscape, including installations inside the iconic Temperate House - the largest surviving Victorian glasshouse in the world - offering a once-in-a-generation opportunity to experience Moore’s work in unique dialogue with Kew’s record-breaking living collections.

To complement this landmark exhibition, Kew Gardens has expertly curated a range of products, exclusively designed to reflect Moore’s artistic legacy and inspiration. Highlights include Kew’s classic tote bag, alongside a luxurious collection of gowns, kimonos, and scarves designed by One Hundred Stars and inspired by Henry Moore’s work.

The collection also features a wide array of lifestyle and gift items, including adult and children’s graphic t-shirts, stylish socks, and sandalwood and cedar soap, designed to evoke the sense of being in an artist’s studio. In collaboration with London-based bag company ROKA London, Kew will introduce a range of Moore-inspired rucksacks and crossbody bags, which will sit alongside the organic cotton classic tote and pack away bags made from recycled plastic bottles.

Art lovers and collectors alike can explore an extensive selection of exhibition merchandise, including three unique tea towels featuring artwork details, collectible pins, magnets, and keyrings, and a series of exclusive postcards showcasing Moore’s sculptures photographed within Kew’s 320 acre UNESCO World Heritage Site. Additional highlights include prints, including a design inspired by the original poster for the historic Sonsbeek '66 exhibition in Arnhem.

Selection highlights:

  • Kew Henry Moore Henry Moore Two Seated Women Scarf - £36
  • Kew Gown Henry Moore Reclining Figure Olive - £95
  • Kew Kimono Henry Moore Two Seated Women - £55
  • Henry Moore Prints - £30
  • ROKA London X Henry Moore collaboration rucksack = £95
  • Henry Moore tote bag - £5

Hannah Oxley, Head of Retail and Ecommerce at Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew said:
“This collection is a celebration of Henry Moore’s extraordinary legacy and the unique dialogue between art and nature at Kew Gardens which this exhibition represents. We wanted to create a range that not only reflects the scale and beauty of the exhibition but also gives visitors a meaningful way to take that experience home with them. From collectible artworks to thoughtfully designed everyday pieces, each item has been inspired by Moore’s iconic forms and his enduring influence on modern art.”

Creative audiences of all ages will be drawn to bespoke art boxes and sketchbooks, while a tabletop calendar for 2027 and a series of shaped and mantlepiece postcards offer unique ways to engage with Moore’s work. A jewellery collection - featuring earrings, necklaces, pendants, brooches, rings, and bracelets - will reinterpret Moore’s sculptural forms into wearable designs.

Members of Kew Gardens will receive a 10% discount in-store and online.

For more information and to view the collection online when live, visit The Kew Shop.

ENDS                

For further information or media requests, please contact pr@kew.org

Notes to Editors

Image available to download here

Images can also be accessed through Press Loft here

About Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew 

The Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (RBG Kew) is a world-renowned charity and global centre for plant and fungal science, education, conservation, and horticulture. We work to tackle biodiversity loss and climate change through innovative research, our living collections and influential partnerships.  

We welcome more than 2.5 million visitors each year to Kew Gardens, London’s largest UNESCO World Heritage Site, and Wakehurst, our wild botanic garden in Sussex, home to the Millennium Seed Bank. Our year-round programme of exhibitions, festivals, learning experiences and events brings our work to life, inspiring visitors of all ages to connect with and care for the natural world. 

Funded through a mix of philanthropy, commercial activity, and government support, we are committed to widening access to nature and creating a thriving planet for all, powered by plants and fungi 

Become a memberBook ticketsDonateExplore more. 

The Henry Moore Foundation was founded by the artist and his family in 1977 to encourage public appreciation of the visual arts. Today it supports innovative sculpture projects, devises an imaginative programme of exhibitions and research worldwide, and preserves the legacy of Moore himself: one of the great sculptors of the twentieth century, who did so much to bring the art form to a wider audience. A registered charity, we award grants to arts organisations around the world, with a mission to bring great sculpture to as many people as possible. 

Henry Moore Studios & Gardens is the former home and workplace of sculptor Henry Moore (1898–1986). From 1940 until his death in 1986, Moore lived and worked in rural Hertfordshire where he acquired over 70 acres of land and set up various studios, creating the ideal environment in which he could make and display his work and cater to an international demand for exhibitions. Now open to the public, the Henry Moore Studios & Gardens offers a unique insight into the artist’s working practice and showcases a large selection of Moore’s sculptures in the landscape in which they were created. It is home to the Henry Moore Archive, one of the largest single-artist archives in the world.

Henry Moore Institute welcomes everyone to visit their galleries, research library and archive of sculptors’ papers to experience, enjoy and research sculpture from around the world. The newly refurbished Institute can be found in the centre of Leeds, the city where Henry Moore (1898–1986) began his training as a sculptor. Their changing programme of historical, modern and contemporary exhibitions and events encourage thinking about what sculpture is, how it is made and the artists who make it. As part of the Henry Moore Foundation, they are a hub for sculpture, connecting a global network of artists and scholars, continuing research into the art form and ensuring that sculpture is accessible and celebrated by a wide audience.

For more information about the Henry Moore Foundation, its two venues in Hertfordshire and Leeds, as well as the philanthropic and educational work carried out by the Henry Moore Grants and Research programmes, please visit henry-moore.org.