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Free Display

Media Networks

See how artists in °Õ²¹³Ù±ð’s collection have responded to the impact of massÌýmedia

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A group of people looking at a cylindrical tower of televisions

© Lee Mawdsley

Look at some of the ways in which artists over the past hundred years have responded to the impact of mass media and the ever-changing technologies that shape our world.

Including a diverse range of techniques and materials – from posters and paint to analogue and digital technology – the display raises questions around feminism, consumerism and the cult of celebrity.

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Natalie Bell Building LevelÌý4 East

Getting Here

Ongoing

Free

10 rooms in Media Networks

Andy Warhol and Mark Bradford

Andy Warhol and Mark Bradford

These artworks raise questions about consumerism, identity, and the power of mass media

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Mark Bradford, Los Moscos 2004. Tate. © Mark Bradford.

Monsieur Vénus

Monsieur Vénus

This room brings together different approaches to the human form, exploring the body’s capacity to disrupt and question traditional hierarchies and gender categories

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Leonor Fini, Little Hermit Sphinx 1948. Tate. © ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2025.

Shashi Bikram Shah

Shashi Bikram Shah

This display explores civil conflict, mourning and memory in a series of works documenting one of the most significant moments in recent Nepali history

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Shashi Bikram Shah Royal Massacre Series 1, 2001

Purchased with funds provided by the South Asia Acquisitions Committee 2024

Everyday Mythologies

Everyday Mythologies

The works in this room explore consumerism, mass-produced objects and advertising as the emerging visual language of the 1960s and 1970s

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Hervé Télémaque The Weathervane 1969 © Tate Photography

Guerrilla Girls

Guerrilla Girls

This display shows the work of the anonymous feminist collective who use daring text and phrases to expose injustice in the art world and beyond

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Photo © Tate (Reece Straw)

Cildo Meireles

Cildo Meireles

Overwhelm your senses withÌýBabel, Meireles’ 2001 artwork,Ìýwhich explores information overload and failedÌýcommunication

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A large tower of individual radios lit with blue light

Cildo Meireles Babel (detail) 2001 Photo: Tate Photography

Raimond Chaves

Raimond Chaves

What histories are revealed through album covers?

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Photo © Tate (Lucy Green)

Ming Wong

Ming Wong

This artist explores the global impact of cinema in shaping identity

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A person looks at their reflection in a mirror. Another person watches from behind, holding a handbag. There are captions at the bottom of the image which read 'I'm white! White!'

Ming Wong Life of Imitation 2009, video still. Courtesy of the Artist and Vitamin Creative Space

Martin Kippenberger

Martin Kippenberger

These rebellious and iconoclastic works reuse imagery from popular visual culture, including art by other artists

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Photo © Tate (Matt Greenwood)

Beyond Pop

Beyond Pop

Artists from across the world have borrowed images from the mass media to comment on social and political issues

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Evelyne Axell, Valentine 1966. Tate. © ADAGP, Paris / DACS, London 2025.

Roy Lichtenstein, Whaam!  1963

Whaam! is based on an image Lichtenstein found in a 1962 DC comic, All American Men of War. Lichtenstein often used art from comics and adverts in his paintings. He saw the act of taking an existing image and changing the context as a way of transforming it’s meaning. Lichtenstein was interested in emotional subjects, such as love and war. His work takes on these themes in a distant and impersonal way.

Gallery label, July 2020

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Cildo Meireles, Babel  2001

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Guerrilla Girls, Dearest Art Collector  1986

The Guerrilla Girls are an anonymous activist group made up of women artists and art professionals. They formed in 1985, in response to an exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in New York which featured only 13 women out of 169 artists. Under the cover of darkness, they fly-posted SoHo street corners, declaring statistics that exposed the gender-based discrimination in museums and art galleries. They hide their identities behind gorilla masks and have adopted pseudonyms of celebrated dead women artists and writers such as Kathë Kollwitz, Frida Kahlo and Gertrude Stein. Today, the group continue to reveal the racism, sexism and homophobia prevalent in art and society. They are most well-known for text-based posters that drip with wit and sarcasm, holding Euro American institutions accountable for their actions. This dry sense of humour on backgrounds of pop pinks and yellows contrasts with the harrowing story of inequality being told. By using straightforward data and rhetorical questions, the facts speak for themselves.

Gallery label, April 2025

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Ming Wong, Life of Imitation  2009

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Martin Kippenberger, Untitled  1989

This sculpture combines elements from two Kippenberger series, the ‘Peter sculptures’ and his ‘drunken lamps’. Here, an angled lamp post skews a bookcase-like structure, while taped to the back is a photo of Kippenberger picking his nose. Kippenberger’s Peter works adopted a DIY aesthetic, using found materials and bits of furniture, often leaving mistakes deliberately visible. They were made in part as a response to the meticulous craftsmanship seen in lots of sculpture. Around this time, he also produced works with bent and wonky lampposts.

Gallery label, August 2024

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Leonor Fini, Little Hermit Sphinx  1948

Fini’s paintings depict women as complex and powerful beings. Little Hermit Sphinx shows a surreal and unsettling scene. A sphinx sits at the threshold of a decrepit building with a human organ hanging above its head. The sphinx is a mythological creature that is part lion and part woman, with the wings of a bird. In 1947 Fini underwent a hysterectomy. The bleeding flesh above and the broken egg below the sphinx might point to the artist coming to terms with infertility. Here the Sphinx assumes a genderless state, becoming Fini’s alter ego and a recurrent symbol of feminine empowerment in her work.Ìý

Gallery label, September 2024

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Highlights

T00897: Whaam!
Roy Lichtenstein Whaam! 1963
T14041: Babel
Cildo Meireles Babel 2001
P78802: Dearest Art Collector
Guerrilla Girls Dearest Art Collector 1986
T15861: Life of Imitation
Ming Wong Life of Imitation 2009
T16064: Untitled
Martin Kippenberger Untitled 1989
T13589: Little Hermit Sphinx
Leonor Fini Little Hermit Sphinx 1948

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