TateShots
Summary: Welcome to TateShots, our weekly programme for art junkies everywhere. TateShots presents a selection of short videos, with a focus on modern and contemporary art. Send feedback to tateshots@tate.org.uk.
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- Artist: Tate
- Copyright: Tate 2018
Podcasts:
Jennifer Allora and Guillermo Calzadilla have been collaborating since 1995, their work spans many mediums - sculpture, photography, performance, sound and video.
Vorticism was a radical art movement that shone briefly but brightly in the years before and during World War I.
Ben Lewis navigates Markus Schinwald's physically unsettling installation, and finds out why the Austrian artist is obsessed with legs
A floating man, a naked woman, and a human revolving door are just some of the surprises that make up '11 Rooms', an exhibition at the Manchester International Festival 2011.
Olafur Eliasson is the Danish artist who brought the sun to Tate Modern's Turbine Hall.
American photographer Taryn Simon talks about her new exhibition at Tate Modern 'A Living Man Declared Dead and Other Chapters'.
Ben Lewis looks back over his busy week at the Venice Biennale 2011
The Manchester International Festival presents new works from across the spectrum of performing arts, visual arts and popular culture.
Neville Gabie is the artist-in-residence for the London 2012 Olympic Games.
For his latest architectural intervention, David Tremlett and a team of assistants spent 12 days rubbing pastel crayons onto the walls at Tate Britain with the palms of their hands
John Martin has been called the father of modern cinema, his epic paintings of apocalyptic destruction were the blockbusters of their time.
With a new display of 47 photographs by the photographer Don McCullin opening at Tate Britain, TateShots inteviews the photographer
Portuguese artist Pedro Cabrita Reis creates installations that revolve around themes of architecture and of memory of place.
Luc Tuymans often uses the history of his country, Belgium, and that of his own family as a starting point in his work.
Maurice Sendak, the creative genius behind books such as ‘Where the Wild Things Are’ and ‘In the Night Kitchen’, is an illustrator whose work has been seen by millions of people all over the world.