Tate Modern
Encyclopedia : T : TA : TAT : Tate Modern
Tate Modern is Britain's national museum of international modern art in London and is, with Tate Britain, Tate Liverpool, Tate St Ives, and Tate Online[link], part of Tate.
The galleries are housed in the former Bankside Power Station, which was originally designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, the architect of Battersea Power Station, and built in two stages between 1947 and 1963. The power station closed in 1981. The building was converted by architects Herzog & de Meuron and stands at 99m tall. Since its opening on May 12, 2000, it has become a very popular destination for Londoners and tourists. Entry to collection displays and some temporary exhibitions is free.
The permanent collection of Tate Modern is on display on levels three and five of the building, while level four houses large temporary exhibitions and a small exhibition space on level 2 houses work by contemporary artists. The Turbine Hall (level 1), which once housed the electricity generators of the old power station, is seven storeys tall with 3,400 square metres of floorspace. It is used to display specially-commissioned work by contemporary artists, between October and March each year in a series sponsored by Unilever. This series was originally planned to last the gallery's first five years, but the popularity of the series has led to its extension until 2008.
When the gallery opened in 2000 the collections were not displayed in chronological order but were rather arranged thematically into four broad groups: History/Memory/Society; Nude/Action/Body; Landscape/Matter/Environment; and Still Life/Object/Real Life. This was ostensibly because a chronological survey of the story of modern art along the lines of the Museum of Modern Art in New York would expose the large gaps in the collections, the result of the Tate's conservative acquisitions policy for the first half of the 20th century. The first rehang at Tate Modern - opened in May 2006 - has eschewed the thematic groupings in favour of focusing on pivotal moments of twentieth-century art, and has been met with critical success.
The artists that have exhibited specially commissioned work in the turbine hall are:
- 2000 — Louise Bourgeois — Maman, I Do, I Undo, I Redo
- 2001 — Juan Muñoz — Double Bind
- 2002 — Anish Kapoor — Marsyas
- 2003 — Ólafur Elíasson — The Weather Project
- 2004 — Bruce Nauman — Raw Materials
- 2005 — Rachel Whiteread — Embankment
There is also a riverboat pier just outside the gallery called Bankside Pier, with connections to the Docklands and Greenwich via regular passenger boat services (commuter service) and the Tate to Tate service, which connects Tate Modern with Tate Britain via the London Eye.
An extension dedicated to photography and video on the south side of the building, also to be designed by Herzog & de Meuron, will increase the display space by 60%. This project will cost over £100 million is scheduled to open in 2012. Pitman, Joanna, [Give us the *%#@ing money!], The Times, April 16, 2006. URL accessed on April 16, 2006.
Gallery
References
External links
- [Tate Online - Official Tate website]
- *[Tate Modern]
- *[Interactive Tate Modern gallery plan]
- [Quicktime VR of the Tate Modern from the Millennium Bridge] - British Tours Ltd
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
