Anyone who has always dreamed of admiring the wreck of the Titanic will soon be able to do so: in 2025, the Musée de la Civilization in Quebec will host an exhibition on the construction and life on board the most famous transatlantic liner of the 20th century.
In a press release issued Wednesday morning, the museum promises an “extremely touching” and “Canadian exclusive” exhibition about the ship’s construction and the organization of life on board.
From May 15 to November 23, 2025, the public can admire items belonging to the crew members and those traveling with them (jewelry, clothing, everyday objects and archives) according to their social class.
Almost 200 treasures are thus presented and presented in reconstructions of rooms that made up the so-called unsinkable liner.
An audio guide broadcasting “a most moving narrative framework” will bring those who lived through the fateful night of April 14-15, 1912 back to life.
The route of this exhibition was developed by one of the greatest experts in Titanic history, Claes-Göran Wetterholm. The latter also has four research trips to the rubble.
“Titanic, the exhibition” is a realization of the Spanish company Musealia, which specializes in projects related to significant historical events. The exhibition is on a world tour and has already been presented in around twenty museums, including Barcelona, Bilbao, Stockholm, London, Mexico City and New York.
“We are convinced that the Titanic exhibition will be a great success because its subject is part of universal memory and that its mere remembrance stirs a sensitive fiber that is common to all,” said Stéphan La Roche, President and CEO of the Museum of Civilization.