Showing 201–220 of 312 results for Barbara Ker-Seymer" theatre
Josiah McElheny on Malevich
When Tate Etc. invited a selection of artists from around the world to write about how Kazimir Malevich has inspired …
MicroTate 14
The Lives of Digital Things: A Community of Practice Dialogue
An 'overflowing, a richness & poetry': Joseph Cornell's Planet Set and Giuditta Pasta
The American artist Joseph Cornell (1903–1972) is famous for his allusive box constructions. This paper examines the history of Planet …
Reverberation of Heroic Symbols in Later Works
Cultivated minds: The art of the garden
Martin Postle talks to Christoph Becker about artists and the inspiration of their gardens
Landscapes of the mind: Mark Rothko II
Simon Grant talks to Brice Marden about his enduring fascination with Rothko’s paintings.
ºÚÁÏÉç: ºÚÁÏÉç Restaurant & Bar
MicroTate 27
Caterina Albano, Hong Ling, Rosa Barba and Henry Holland reflect on works in the Tate collection, including a recent purchase …
John Gibson and the Anglo-Italian Sculpture Market in Rome: Letters, Sketches and Marble
John Gibson established a hugely successful sculpture studio in Rome, and despite strong reasons to return to London, such as …
Performing Global African Culture and Citizenship: Major Pan-African Cultural Festivals from Dakar 1966 to FESTAC 1977
This article traces the ways in which the understanding and expression of global African culture and citizenship evolved across a …
In Conversation: Under the Bridge
The art of Mark Leckey has often explored the tensions between popular culture and technology, imbued with his own potent …
The Tate Etc. Guide to... Biomorphism
Jennifer Higgie explores how 20th-century artists sought inspiration from the life forms that surround us
Every work of art is the child of its time, often it is the mother of our emotions": Kandinsky
Wassily Kandinsky’s ground-breaking theoretical publication Concerning the Spiritual in Art (1912), with its emphasis on colours as “vibrations of the …
A stubborn cornerstone at the onset of modernism: Henri Rousseau
Dexter Dalwood and Nancy Ireson explore the enduring influence and legacy of the self-taught French artist ±á±ð²Ô°ù¾±Ìý¸é´Ç³Ü²õ²õ±ð²¹³Ü
Publishing archive collections online
Supporting the discovery of digitised archive collections through online engagement
Materials Coursework Guide
From 'usual' to unlikely art materials: explore textures, qualities, techniques and symbolism of things artists use to make their work