Courtesy Carl Clerkin
The fictional Learned Society of Extra Ordinary Objects is behind an imaginative new exhibition at London's Somerset House.
Courtesy of JasleenKaur
British furniture designer Carl Clerkin and artist Danny Clarke asked designers, artists and makers to contribute ordinary objects or extraordinary designs to the exhibition.
Courtesy Richard Slee/Hales Gallery
The ordinary objects are accompanied by stories -- "absolute truths and half-truths about the history of the place," according to Clerkin -- explaining their relevance.
Courtesy Jasleen Kaur
"We wanted to talk about a fascination with the everyday, the mundane, the ordinary," Clerkin said.
Courtesy Richard Slee/Hales Gallery
The more unusual objects -- like the ones in this gallery -- are unaccompanied, and invite viewers to develop their own interpretations.
Courtesy Hans Stofer
"It's funny watching people reading the stories, designs and exhibits and having a little chuckle. That's very rewarding as a curator," he said.
Courtesy Hans Stoffer
The Learned Society of Extra Ordinary Objects was inspired by the private societies that were residents of Somerset House during the 18th and 19th centuries.
Courtesy Michael Marriott
"The Learned Society of Extra Ordinary Objects" is on at Somerset House in London until Sept. 3, 2017.
CNN  — 

A new secret society has taken over London’s Somerset House.

The neoclassical building’s terrace rooms have been converted to an exhibition hall and headquarters – complete with gin bar – for the Learned Society of Extra Ordinary Objects, a fictional society based on the private societies that were residents of Somerset House during the 18th and 19th centuries.

According to a placard at the entrance, the Learned Society was founded in 1717 and closed in 1973 “due to the Society’s crippling debts,” but has now been revived by a group of 30 designers, artists and makers. Together they have furnished the space with everyday objects with compelling origins.

Most objects – rubber bands, playing cards, a framed blonde mustache – have been borrowed from members’ personal collections and are accompanied by explanatory text from their owners. Some of the stories are true, some of them are not, resulting in what British furniture designer Carl Clerkin, who curated the exhibition with artist Danny Clarke, called a collection of “absolute truths and half-truths about the history of the place.”

Courtesy Somerset House
A wall of portraits show to member-contributors to the Learned Society of Extra Ordinary Objects.

Others, like a broom a broom handle that turns in on itself and black waste baskets full of ceramic coal, are works of art and design, and invite the viewer to devise their own stories.

“We wanted to talk about a fascination with the everyday, the mundane, the ordinary,” Clerkin said. “I feel like a really broad audience can come and understand what we’re talking about.”

Clerkin and Clarke are old hands at the immersive exhibition game. In 2015 the two collaborated on “A Proper East End Pub,” a traditional London pub constructed out of cardboard, and last year they reconstructed Maltasingh’s Indian Kitchen, a fictional restaurant sold as London’s first curry house, complete with staffed kitchen. All of this was intended to make design more accessible and enjoyable to the general public.

“It’s funny watching people reading the stories, designs and exhibits and having a little chuckle. That’s very rewarding as a curator,” Clerkin said. “It all comes down to really lovely stories.”

“The Learned Society of Extra Ordinary Objects” is on at Somerset House in London until Sept. 3, 2017.