News Articles Library Event Photos Contact Search


Thursday, 02 April 2015 12:54

Tate Britain Presents a Site-Specific Installation in Its Neoclassical Duveen Galleries

The Duveen Gallery. The Duveen Gallery. Wikipedia

Being asked to make a site-specific work can be a poisoned chalice for an artist, particularly when the site is the suite of three neo-classical Duveen galleries that form the architectural spine of Tate Britain. These vaulting, pompous spaces –named after the wily Edwardian art dealer Joseph Duveen, who paid for their columns, pediments, and polished floors –have each year been given over to a British artist to work with. Last year, Phyllida Barlow dominated the space by filling it with a forest of wooden scaffolds, suspended blocks and mountains of wooden pallets.

Additional Info

Events