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Free Display

Materials and Objects

Discover artists from Tate's collection who have embraced new and unusual materials and methods

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© Meschac Gaba / Photo © Tate (Jai Monaghan)

The Materials and Objects display looks at the inventive ways in which artists around the world use diverse materials.

Increasingly over the last hundred years, artists have challenged the idea that certain materials are unsuitable for art. Some employ industrial materials and methods, while others adapt craft skills, or put the throwaway products of consumer society to new uses.

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Natalie Bell Building Level 4 West

Getting Here

Ongoing

Free

9 rooms in Materials and Objects

Salvador Dalí and Robert Zhao Renhui

Salvador Dalí and Robert Zhao Renhui

Through surrealism and speculation, the artworks in this room disrupt our assumptions about the world around us

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Salvador Dalí, Lobster Telephone 1938. Tate. © Salvador Dali, Gala-Salvador Dali Foundation/DACS, London 2025.

Collage

Collage

Find out how combining everyday objects and materials became a new technique for twentieth-century artists

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Enrico Baj, Fire! Fire! 1963–4. Tate. © Enrico Baj .

David Hammons

David Hammons

In this room, discarded materials are transformed into artworks, playing with cultural assumptions of value

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David Hammons Untitled (from Fantasy in Flight Series) 1995 Photo © Tate (Oliver Cowling)

Simone Leigh

Simone Leigh

In 2019, Simone Leigh created a series of sculptures which combine the torso and head of a woman with the architecture of a dwelling place or shelter

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Sentinel © Simone Leigh, Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery. Photo by Timothy Schenck

Nalini Malani

Nalini Malani

Nalini Malani’s ‘video shadow plays’ combine video, shadow and sound to tell multiple stories. In this work, she creates a tribute to women’s lives forgotten throughout history

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Nalini Malani, In Search of Vanished Blood 2012–20. Photo © Tate (Joe Humphrys)

Leonor Antunes

Leonor Antunes

These sculptures bring together traditional crafts and modernist architectural forms, reflecting on how materials can divide and articulate space

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View of the exhibition Leonor Antunes the last days in Chimalistac at Kunsthalle Basel, 2013 - Courtesy Leonor Antunes and Kunsthalle Basel, photo Nick Ash

View of the exhibition Leonor Antunes: the last days in Chimalistac at Kunsthalle Basel, 2013

Courtesy Leonor Antunes and Kunsthalle Basel, photo: Nick Ash

Around the Fountain

Around the Fountain

How does the body relate to the material structures of the everyday world?

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Marcel Duchamp, Fountain 1917, replica 1964. Tate. © Succession Marcel Duchamp/ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2025.

Robert Gober

Robert Gober

What societal expectations are represented within the image of the home?

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Photo © Tate (Matt Greenwood)

Meschac Gaba

Meschac Gaba

What happens when objects of spiritual and personal significance are displayed in a museum?

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© Meschac Gaba / Photo © Tate (Jai Monaghan)

Marcel Duchamp, Fountain  1917, replica 1964

This work, signed with the pseudonym ‘R. Mutt’ in black paint, is an example of what Duchamp called a ‘ready-made’ sculpture. These were everyday mass-produced objects presented as artworks. The title Fountain is a playful nod to how urination can resemble a fountain’s spurt of water. Duchamp’s use of a pseudonym, the title, and the reorientation of the urinal from its usual upright position, all point to his interest in double meanings, words and role play. Like cruising, Duchamp described the selection of a ready-made artwork as a matter of timing and ‘a kind of rendezvous.’ The original work is now lost. This is a 1964 replica made from glazed earthenware and painted to resemble the original porcelain.

Gallery label, April 2025

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highlights in Materials and Objects

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Enrico Baj, Fire! Fire! &²Ô²ú²õ±è;1963–4

Baj’s works were influenced by the absurd humour and unconventional techniques of surrealism and dada. He was also associated with CoBrA, a group of European artists who adopted a highly expressionist painting style inspired by children’s art. In the mid-1950s Baj started painting caricatured figures on found fabrics, adding details made from collaged objects. In Fire! Fire! pieces of Meccano construction toys form a figure, while the leaves on the woven fabric are suggestive of flames. Other works of this period poke fun at ideas of power and authority, such as Baj’s portraits of military officers ‘decorated’ with real medals.

Gallery label, November 2021

2/6
highlights in Materials and Objects

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Leonor Antunes, discrepancies with T.P. (II) – random intersections #29 – Lena #8.1 &²Ô²ú²õ±è;2012–23

3/6
highlights in Materials and Objects

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Nalini Malani, In Search of Vanished Blood &²Ô²ú²õ±è;2012–20

Nalini Malani’s ‘video shadow plays’ combine video, shadow and sound to tell multiple stories. In this work, she creates a tribute to women’s lives forgotten throughout history. Each cylinder in In Search of Vanished Blood is reverse painted and features images of dispossessed people, mythological figures and surgical instruments. The artist draws inspiration from a range of sources. We hear Cassandra, a figure from Greek mythology who predicts the future but is cursed, so no-one believes her. Referencing texts from German writers Christa Wolf and Heiner Müller, Indian writer and activist Mahasweta Devi, Irish author Samuel Beckett, and others, Cassandra anticipates violence against women during periods of political upheaval.

The title of the work In Search of Vanished Blood is from the poem Lahu ka Surag 1965 by Pakistani writer Faiz Ahmed Faiz. Lines from the poem appear over Cassandra’s veiled face. Malani’s work reflects her commitment to feminist activism. In Search of Vanished Blood amplifies women’s voices to express Malani’s belief in humanism – the strength of what we have in common rather than what divides us.

Gallery label, April 2025

4/6
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Robert Gober, Untitled &²Ô²ú²õ±è;1989–92

This is one of about ten leg sculptures Gober made in a two-year period. They were inspired by two formative experiences – a story his mother, who had been a nurse, told young Gober about being handed an amputated leg in the operating theatre. The second was as an adult, seeing a sliver of bare skin exposed by a fellow passenger crossing their legs on a flight. The artist said of his making process: ‘The hair on the leg is human and purchased from a wig supplier. The leg is a bleached beeswax cast of my lower leg. The hairs are implanted into the warmed-up beeswax, one by one, with a tool we crafted through trial and error in the studio.

Gallery label, August 2024

5/6
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David Hammons, Untitled from Flight Fantasy series  1995

An earlier iteration of this piece was made for A Gathering of the Tribes – a New York salon, gallery and performance space based in the East Village tenement home belonging to Hammons’ friend, the poet Steve Cannon (1935–2019). In the late 1990s and early 2000s the success of the East Village arts scene led to rising property prices and the gentrification of the neighbourhood. In 2014, Cannon was forced to leave his building. As a result, the wall on which the original artwork was created became subject to a planning dispute, prompting a debate about cultural heritage, value and what constitutes an artwork.

Gallery label, August 2024

6/6
highlights in Materials and Objects

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Highlights

T07573: Fountain
Marcel Duchamp Fountain 1917, replica 1964
T01777: Fire! Fire!
Enrico Baj Fire! Fire! 1963–4
T14974: discrepancies with T.P. (II) – random intersections #29 – Lena #8.1
Leonor Antunes discrepancies with T.P. (II) – random intersections #29 – Lena #8.1 2012–23
T15837: In Search of Vanished Blood
Nalini Malani In Search of Vanished Blood 2012–20
T06658: Untitled
Robert Gober Untitled 1989–92
T16105: Untitled from Flight Fantasy series
David Hammons Untitled from Flight Fantasy series 1995

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See all 32 artworks in Materials and Objects

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