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Tate Britain Exhibition

Tate Britain Commission 2013: Simon Starling Phantom Ride

12 March – 20 October 2013
Tate Britain Commission 2013: Simon Starling Phantom Ride
  • What will you discover?
  • Related events
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Alfred Carlebach 1939, Simon Starling commission Tate Britain

Alfred Carlebach 1939

Fiona Banner, Jaguar 2010, Installation view, Tate Britain 2010

Fiona Banner, Jaguar 2010, Installation view, Tate Britain 2010

Martin Creed Work No. 850 2008, Installation view, Tate Britain 2010

Martin Creed Work No. 850 2008, Installation view, Tate Britain 2010

Tate Director John Rothenstein with Tate staff surveying the damage caused by a bomb which hit the Gallery on 16 September 1940

Tate Director John Rothenstein with Tate staff surveying the damage caused by a bomb which hit the Gallery on 16 September 1940

Statue of St George 1510, Installation view, Tate Britain 2001

Statue of St George 1510, Installation view, Tate Britain 2001

Scott Myles The End of Summer 2001, Installation view, Tate Britain 2006

Scott Myles The End of Summer 2001, Installation view, Tate Britain 2006

Crack in the floor of Gallery 29, Tate Britain

Crack in the floor of Gallery 29, Tate Britain

The Tate Britain Commission invites an artist to develop a new work in response to the Tate collection, highlighting the continuum of visual and intellectual ideas between historic and contemporary art.

For 2013, Simon Starling invites you to take a ‘rollercoaster ride on invisible rails’ through histories and memories of Tate Britain’s famous Duveen galleries with Phantom Ride.

Collapsing time and space, cutting back and forth on a looping trajectory, Simon Starling redoubles the space of the galleries with huge projection screens and reveals significant artworks and events that have previously animated the space like ghostly apparitions. Float weightlessly over the rubble of the destructive bomb-blast that ruptured the space in 1940, confront an up-turned Jaguar jet fighter, and greet iconic paintings that float ethereally mid air.

The phantom ride was a genre of film popular in the very early days of cinema. A camera was fixed to a moving vehicle to simulate a journey for an immobile cinema audience. They sat pinned to their seats, white-knuckled for fear they might derail on the next precipitous bend. The train tracks or the road anticipated the trajectory of the ‘phantom’ vehicle. Here though, the way has vanished. The highly precise and repeatable movements of the huge robotic arm on the similarly track-bound ‘motion control camera’ used to make this film facilitate a rollercoaster ride on invisible rails. The film’s soundtrack is the only remaining evidence of the camera’s week-long presence in the Duveens – the audible contractions and expansions, the ascents, descents and contortions, of a very real machine.
Simon Starling

What will you discover?

The Duveen Sculpture Galleries opened to the public in 1937. Stretching over 300 feet, the two long galleries with high, barrel-vaulted ceilings were the first public galleries in England designed specifically for the display of sculpture. They were founded by Sir Joseph Duveen and designed by the architects Romanie-Walker and Gilbert Jenkins.

Using video, film, photography, slide projection and sculpture, Simon Starling reworks existing objects and architectural spaces, adding layers to their histories to create compelling poetic narratives. His works often use historical or geological research as a point of departure, and explore the origins of materials and the processes which transform them into functional objects.

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TateShots: Simon Starling's Phantom Ride

Born in Epsom in 1967, Starling studied photography and art at Maidstone College of Art, Trent Polytechnic Nottingham and Glasgow School of Art. Since his first solo exhibition at the Showroom in London in 1995, his work has been widely exhibited in the UK and elsewhere. Recent exhibitions include Simon Starling: Recent History at Tate St Ives in 2011, at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Hiroshima in 2011, at the Musée d’Art Contemporain du Val-de-Marne, Paris in 2009 and at The Power Plant, Toronto in 2008. He was awarded the Turner Prize in 2005 for Shedboatshed.

Tate Britain

Millbank
London SW1P 4RG
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Dates

12 March – 20 October 2013

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Find out more

  • Simon Starling, Phantom Ride Tate Britain 2013 Commission, installation view

    Simon Starling in conversation with Janet Harbord

    Simon Starling in conversation with Janet Harbord at Tate Britain 22 May 2013

  • Simon Starling wins the Turner Prize 2005

    Simon Starling wins the Turner Prize 2005: Press related to past exhibition.

  • Simon Starling Recent History exhibition banner

    Simon Starling: Recent History

    Simon Starling: Recent History - past exhibition at Tate St Ives

  • Patrick Keiller at Tate Britain

    Patrick Keiller The Robinson Institute

    Patrick Keiller creates an ambitious new project in the Duveen Galleries, Tate Britain from March 2012

  • Artist

    Simon Starling

    born 1967
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