The exhibition’s title ‘Walk the House’ is drawn from a Korean expression referring to the hanok – a house that could ...
Contemporary artists have extended the vocabulary of the sublime by looking back to earlier traditions and by engaging with aspects of modern society. They have located the sublime in not only the ...
Join us for a book reading and draw along event to celebrate new Tate children's publication, Grandma’s Locs by Karen Arthur, illustrated by Camilla Ru. Grandma has beautiful locs. Whenever she comes ...
In 1886 the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche declared the sublime out of date. A number of artists of early and mid-twentieth century continued to engage with concepts of the sublime, though often in ...
Fig.2 John Constable The Cornfield 1826 National Gallery, London Born into a prosperous family in the village of East Bergholt, Suffolk, Constable’s early display of aptitude and passion for painting ...
From ‘The Tenth Plague of Egypt’ exhibited 1802, JMW Turner, N00470, Tate Collection ...
Our activities are inspired by our free Brickworks display! Put your building skills to the test in our Brick-tionary game. Communicate with your team mates as you construct some amazing creations.
Korean-born, London-based artist Do Ho Suh invites visitors to explore his large-scale installations, sculptures, videos and drawings in this major survey exhibition. Is home a place, a feeling, or an ...
Suspended, collapsed, stacked, wrapped or folded, the works of Phyllida Barlow spring from an interrogation of some of the most fundamental aspects of sculpture: its physical attributes and its ...
This is one of four reports produced by researchers in the project Reshaping the Collectible: When Artworks Live in the Museum. Each offers a perspective from one of four practices that are changing ...
Farley is an autistic artist whose work explores her autism, UK disability culture and inclusion. She subverts the traditional culture of galleries and museums, while acknowledging their dedication to ...
Longinus, ‘Longinus on the Sublime’, trans. by W.H. Fyfe and Donald Russell, in Jeffrey Henderson (ed.), Aristotle, Poetics; Longinus, on the Sublime; Demetrius ...