LOS ANGELES, CA.- On September 14 the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures will open Jaws: The Exhibition. This is the museums first large-scale exhibition dedicated to a single film, and the largest exhibition ever mounted showcasing Universal Pictures landmark summer blockbuster, which earned three Academy Awards® and was nominated for Best Picture. The exhibition celebrates the 50th anniversary of Steven Spielbergs Jaws (1975) and will remain on view through July 26, 2026. The Academy Museum has also announced that in 2028, it will honor the legacy of Steven Spielberg and mount the first-ever retrospective exhibition dedicated to Spielbergs era-defining career, providing visitors with insight into his creative process and bringing them closer than ever to his filmography.
This exhibition is awesome, said Spielberg. Every room has the minutiae of how this picture came together and it proves how this motion picture industry is really, truly a collaborative art form. This is an art form that only survives by getting the best people in all the right positions. I am so proud to be part of it . . . and people have a chance between now and July to come here to the Academy Museum and live it for the first time.
We are so excited for visitors to experience Jaws: The Exhibition, said Academy Museum Director and President Amy Homma. With its innovative storytelling, Jaws changed popular culture and film history in ways that are still reverberating. We invite people to come immerse themselves in all things Jaws and are honored to continue the collaboration on the 2028 retrospective exhibition celebrating Steven Spielbergs filmography. We cant wait to share more about this amazing new exhibition, and we are so grateful for this new partnership that celebrates cinema.
Senior Exhibitions Curator, Jenny He, said: Its hard to believe this day is finally here. By now, Ive stopped counting how many times Ive watched Jaws. But I can tell you, it still thrills and captivates me, just as it has thrilled and captivated worldwide audiences over the past five decades; and continues to do so today. It has been a joy to work with so many outstanding collaborators to tell the story of Jaws through an exhibition.
On view in the Marilyn and Jeffrey Katzenberg Gallery, Jaws: The Exhibition translates the movie into a multi-gallery experience for audiences of all ages. It features scene breakdowns, interactive experiences, behind-the-scenes stories, and some 200 original objects, many never before publicly displayed. The galleries include materials from the personal collections of Steven Spielberg and the Amblin Hearth Archive, the NBCUniversal Archives & Collections, and the vast Academy Collection.
The exhibition follows the films narrative, taking visitors from the opening credits to the films gripping conclusion. Expanding on the three-act structure of the film, the story is told in six sections: The Unseen Danger, Amity Island Welcomes You, Sunday at the Beach, The Sharks Rampage, Adventure Ahead, and Into the Deep. A seventh, concluding gallery explores the enduring impact of the film.
The exhibition includes:
- Behind-the-scenes photos of Spielberg on set, the construction of the mechanical shark used in production, location scouting, and the cast and crew during filming, as well as Super 8 foot-age shot by Steven Spielberg during the making of Jaws
- Handwritten and hand-sketched materials, including Steven Spielbergs annotated script, storyboards and original concept illustrations of the shark by production designer Joe Alves, composer John Williamss sheet music, and sketches of a shark rising from the depths by the artist behind the iconic Jaws poster image, Roger Kastel
- Filming and editing equipment, including the Moviola machine used by the films editor Verna Fields, the original Jaws clapper board from the collection of Steven Spielberg, and the Panavision Underwater Camera used to shoot key scenes
- Original props, including the prop head of Ben Gardner used for the film's indelible "jump scare," Quints fighting chair and the shark weathervane from his shack, Hoopers shark cage, components of the Orca, and the Beach Closed sign
- Recreations of the "Amity Island Welcomes You billboards, orange and white striped beach cabanas, and the shark chalkboard drawing featured during Quints introduction (remade for the Academy Museum by production designer Joe Alves)
- Promotional items, from original theatrical release posters from around the world to innovative merchandise such as the Jaws Feeding Time cereal box, iron-on patches, toys, accessories and even products from Universal theme parks around the globe
- Interactives, including opportunities to recreate the films dolly zoom effect, play John Williamss two-note score that signals the sharks approach, and operate a scale replica of the mechanical shark