What’s clear in Now You See Us is that the artists were excluded from the canon because of sociopolitical factors, not artistic merit.
You See Us," a sweeping exhibition at London's Tate Britain, spotlights the U.K.'s great women artists from 1520 to 1920.
Artist Jasleen Kaur, who is nominated for the Turner Prize, shares inspiration for us for our series "Source Material." ...
Controversial sculpture sparks discussions. Explore Jason deCaires Taylor's thought-provoking artwork inspired by Shakespeare ...
Artist Anya Gallaccio talks about her relationship with ordinary, ephemeral materials ahead of her new exhibition, 'preserve' ...
After wartime horrors, the photographer – now the subject of a biopic, Lee, with Kate Winslet – moved to Farleys. "It gave ...
“I have no ideas,” Tracey Emin says, a little sharply. Talking to her in a calm office in south London, I have made the ...
THEY dominated the charts in the Nineties and some are bidding to do it again. But the Kings and Queens of ­Britpop better ...
Experience history like never before as A.I. reveals the appearances of some of the most significant historical figures.
Tate Britain today opens its highly anticipated exhibition featuring the work of the four artists shortlisted for the Turner ...
For some time I’ve dreaded the arrival of the Turner Prize each year, as it all became a very dour affair indeed. It seems ...
Research on British landscape art has been a recurrent theme in the century-long history of Tate Britain and its forerunner, the Tate Gallery. Tate’s collection includes many thousands of paintings ...