Exhibition “Shaping the Future: A History of Lithuanian High Tech”
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2026 09 09 – 2027 06 09
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T. Kosciuškos St. 3, Vilnius
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Exhibition
Technology has become an integral part of our everyday lives. It fits into our pockets, and helps us to diagnose diseases, transmit messages, store data, conduct space exploration, and has transformed the ways we learn, work, heal, and communicate. It has become so familiar that we rarely pause to consider where it all began.
And yet, it did not begin with a device, a microchip, or a laboratory process. It began with a single person. With a question someone refused to let go of. With a mistake that opened an unexpected path. With long, painstaking, and often invisible work. With curiosity, perseverance, and a belief in an idea that, at the time, may have seemed too ambitious, too distant, or even impossible.
In Shaping the Future, technology becomes part of cultural history – a story that explores why technologies emerge, who creates them, and what they reveal about society, the state, the spirit of an era, and human imagination. This exhibition offers an opportunity to see Lithuania not only as a country benefiting from global progress, but also as one that contributes to shaping it.
Lithuania’s technological trajectory has been a long time in the making. It stretches from the traditions of knowledge, measurement, calculation, engineering thought, and the patronage of the Grand Duchy of Lithuania to today’s contemporary lasers, biotechnology, space technologies, robotics, information technologies, and the ecosystem of unicorn companies. This trajectory has extended beyond Lithuania’s geographical borders, as some scientists of Lithuanian origin continued to work on it in the West, leaving behind stories that Lithuania is only now beginning to rediscover and share.
This path was shaped by science-based schools, laboratories, institutes, communities, coincidences, bold decisions, and people working quietly behind the scenes. This is not a straightforward story: for a long time, it remained scattered across company archives, in private drawers, documents, prototypes, and human memory.
The exhibition aims to bring back the people behind Lithuanian high technology – the scientists, engineers, programmers, and inventors. Their stories have been rarely told, partly because many of these creators worked during times when speaking publicly about oneself was uncommon, and before the world of technology had begun to recognize its prominent heroes.
The exhibition also highlights a less frequently talked about side of progress – those who believe in ideas before anyone else does. Historical patrons, philanthropists, entrepreneurs, contemporary foundations, and representatives in the high-tech sector remind us that the most ambitious discoveries do not occur in a vacuum: they require an environment of trust, support, and encouragement long before success can be guaranteed.
Technology is not just a sign of the present – it has its own past, its creators, and its place within Lithuania’s cultural history. And the future always starts taking shape long before it becomes visible.
Join us in bringing a Lithuanian-speaking robot to life: click here.
“Not a Day Without Robotics”: How a Humanoid is Being Created for a Museum in Lithuania: click here.

