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Altermodern: Tate Triennial 2009 (UK)

January 03, 2009 By: 1stAngel Category: Uncategorized No Comments →

3 February – 26 April 2009

Altermodern, the fourth Tate Triennial, which will present some of the best new contemporary art in Britain, opens at Tate Britain on 3 February 2009. It includes works in all media - from photography, film and video, to extraordinary installations - and features many new works being shown for the first time.

The exhibition proposes a definition for a new form of art that celebrates a fresh energy and spirit in contemporary culture. Altermodern has been conceived by Nicolas Bourriaud, Gulbenkian Curator of Contemporary Art, and one of Europe’s most respected curators. Bourriaud founded the influential contemporary art gallery Palais de Tokyo in Paris and has been working at Tate Britain on the exhibition since 2007.

Bourriaud defines the work of a group of leading contemporary artists as Altermodern, or an alternative modern. The exhibition argues that the historical period defined by post-modernism is coming to an end, and a new art form for the 21st century is emerging. If early twentieth-century Modernism is characterised as a broadly Western cultural phenomenon, and Postmodernism was shaped by ideas of multi-culturalism, origins and identity, Altermodern is expressed in the language of a global culture. Altermodern artists channel the many different forms of social and technological networks offered by rapidly increasing lines of communication and travel in a globalised world.

The exhibition will present new and recent works by artists at the forefront of their generation - both artists living and working in Britain and those who are identified as ‘passers-by’. The artists featured include Franz Ackermann, Darren Almond, Charles Avery, Walead Beshty, Spartacus Chetwynd, Marcus Coates, Peter Coffin, Matthew Darbyshire, Shezad Dawood, Tacita Dean, Ruth Ewan, Loris Gréaud, Subodh Gupta, Rachel Harrison, Joachim Koester, Nathaniel Mellors, Gustav Metzger, Mike Nelson, David Noonan, Katie Paterson, Olivia Plender, Seth Price, Navin Rawanchaikul, Lindsay Seers, Bob and Roberta Smith, Simon Starling, Pascale Marthine Tayou and Tris Vonna-Michell.

A series of one-day events, or prologues, are taking place in the lead up to the show, to introduce and provoke debate around Altermodern. With contributions from prominent writers, art historians, artists and philosophers, including Tom McCarthy, Okwui Enwezor and Carsten Höller, each prologue comprises lectures, performances and film. Prologue 4: Borders is the final prologue and will take place on Saturday 17 January 2009. The event will include a Declaration on Inauthenticity by the International Necronautical Society (INS), films by General Idea and a panel discussion about the concept Altermodern between several of the artists represented in the exhibition and other contributors, chaired by Nicolas Bourriaud.

Tate Britain
Tuesday 3 February – Sunday 26 April 2009
Admission £7.80 ( £4.90 concessions)
Opening hours: Tate Britain is open daily, 10.00-17.50
Exhibitions 10.00-17.40 (last admission 17.00)
Late night opening on the first Friday of each month - last admission 21.00

Tate unites the London and New York versions of Cy Twombly’s great painting cycle The Four Seasons = Thursday 19/6 – Sunday 14/9/2008

April 25, 2008 By: 1stAngel Category: Uncategorized No Comments →

Tate Modern Level 4 East
Thursday 19 June – Sunday 14 September 2008
Admission £10 ( £8 concessions)
Opening hours: Sunday to Thursday, 10.00–18.00. Friday and Saturday, 10.00–22.00. Last admission into exhibitions 17.15 (Friday and Saturday 21.15).
Public information number: 020 7887 8888.
Public information URL: http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/cytwombly/default.shtm

On the eve of the artist’s 80th birthday on 25 April 2008, Tate has announced that it will bring together, for the first time, two of Cy Twombly’s great painting series from the 1990s as part of a major exhibition of his work at Tate Modern which opens on 19 June 2008. Comprising two sets of four enormous canvases, Tate will unite The Four Seasons 1994-5 from the Tate Collection and The Four Seasons 1993-4 from The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. (more…)

Late at Tate Liverpool: Folie à Deux

April 13, 2008 By: 1stAngel Category: Art No Comments →

On the last Thursday of every month Tate Liverpool is open late for special events, music, food, drink and the best modern and contemporary art. This month’s Late at Tate on Thursday 24 April (18.00 – 21.00) is inspired by the French phrase, Folie à Deux which literally translates as, ‘a madness shared by two’ and explores similar themes to those featured in Tate Liverpool’s current exhibition of work by Franco-American artist, Niki de Saint Phalle. One of the key elements in her work was collaboration: performances and large scale public art installations were mediums in which de Saint Phalle experimented throughout her career and she created sculptures and films alongside her partner, the celebrated artist Jean Tinguely. She also worked closely with leading figures such as Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg. Visitors of April’s Late at Tate can expect an evening of intrigue, collaboration and celebration. (more…)

Hockney gives Tate giant painting

April 07, 2008 By: 1stAngel Category: Art No Comments →

Renowned UK artist David Hockney has donated the biggest painting of his career to Tate Britain in London.

The work, Bigger Trees Near Warter, is 4.6m by 12m (40ft by 15ft) and is made up of a grid of 50 small canvases.

The portrait, of a typical Yorkshire landscape, was first exhibited last year at the Royal Academy. It will be displayed at Tate Britain in 2009. (more…)

Street Art at Tate Modern

April 03, 2008 By: 1stAngel Category: Uncategorized No Comments →

Sponsored by Nissan QASHQAI

Friday 23 May – Monday 25 August 2008

In the first commission to use the iconic river façade of Tate Modern, the gallery will present the work of six internationally acclaimed artists, whose work is intricately linked to the urban environment. Street Art at Tate Modern, sponsored by Nissan QASHQAI, opens on 23 May and is the first major public museum display of Street Art in London.

All six artists are represented in major collections around the world and regularly shown in gallery exhibitions and biennales but their work began in public urban spaces and remains indebted to Street Art and graffiti traditions. (more…)


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