Showing 2,041–2,060 of 3,389 results
Seung-Taek Lee's Godret Stone, 1958: Recent aquisitions
Tate Etc. looks at a recent acquisition, currently on view at Tate Modern
Not Just a Stroll in the Garden: Patrick Heron
An appreciation of the little-known ‘supreme gifts’ of the painter Patrick Heron by his younger brother
The luminous view: Recent Artists's Film and Video in Britain 2008-13
Tate Britain is staging an ambitious survey of artists' film and video which reflects the extraordinary blossoming and diversity of …
The imperfectionist: Urs Fischer and his public clay projects
A Swiss-style chalet made from bread; an excavated gallery floor; life-like wax figures that double as candles… Urs Fischer’s irreverent …
How I learned to see: Richard Deacon at Tate Britain
The leading British sculptor Richard Deacon (born 1949), who first gained international prominence in the early 1980s, is the subject …
'Here, I knew I was being watched': BMW Tate Live: Performance Room
BMW Tate Live: Performance Room is a series of performances commissioned and conceived exclusively to be viewed online, and the …
Hellfire, damnation... and pudding: John Martin
The celebrated New Zealand chef Peter Gordon creates a novel recipe inspired – unexpectedly – by John Martin's apocalyptic painting …
Giorgio Griffa's Segni orizzontali, 1975: Recent aquisitions
Tate Etc. looks at a recent acquisition, currently on view at Tate Modern
Before the flood, or after the war?: Winifred Knights at Tate Britain
For his recent verse drama Pink Mist, Owen Sheers interviewed dozens of wounded soldiers who had returned from conflict, …
The fascinating absurdity of sculpture: In the studio: Phyllida Barlow
On the eve of her forthcoming Tate Britain Commission to create a new work in response to the Tate collection, …
The detritus of the future and pleasure of the past: Ruin Lust at Tate Britain
The exhibition Ruin Lust at Tate Britain explores artists’ and subsequently photographers’ fascination with the ruin, via works from JMW …
You can hear the welding. And you can hear the blows of the hammer: David Smith
Richard Wentworth saw David Smith’s Wagon II in Smith’s outdoor studio in New York in the 1970s. Here he takes …
Who paints bread better than Dal�: Salvador Dalà III
‘God save the King!’ was one of DalÃ's last, typically provocative, public pronouncements. Jeff Koons explains how meeting Dalà when …
Say butterfly!: Salvador Dalà II
When Diedrich Diederichsen went to Cadaquès in the late 1970s he wasn’t expecting to stumble into the surreal world of …
River of dreams: Turner Whistler Monet
When the seventeenth-century diarist John Evelyn described London as a ‘Hellish and dismall Cloud of SEA-COALE’, he was one among …
The poetics of space
Sculptors and architects both work with form in space, albeit on different scales and using varying methods. Anthony Caro, known …
Model behaviour: Thomas Demand
Matt Watkins talks to the German artist Thomas Demand about how he makes his photographs
MicroTate 3
Elisabeth Bronfen, Lucinda Hawksley, John Paul Lynch and Callum Innes reflect on a work in the Tate collection
Messages from the other world: Behind the curtain
In 1934 the sculptor John Skeaping told the Daily Mail: ‘Perhaps I ought to tell you that I have …
The legacy of a myth maker: Joseph Beuys
Joseph Beuys is considered by some as the most important of the post-war period – a sculptor, performance artist, teacher …