The novelist Ian McEwantells a good storyabout the opening party for Tate Modern on 11 May 2000, when he was introduced to the then prime minister, Tony Blair, by the Tate director,Nicholas Serota. Mr Blair shook the author’s hand and told him that he was a big fan of his work and had some of his paintings in Downing Street.
Yoko Ono, Jarvis Cocker and Neil Tennant were also there, along with Queen Elizabeth II. As the gallery celebrates its25th anniversary, it is hard to imagine such an extravaganza happening today.
Back then,Londonwas the only major European city not to boast a world-class gallery of modern art.This repurposed power station was set to become the UK’s cultural powerhouse. Hulking on a once unloved stretch of the South Bank, its 99-metre tower signalled a message of regeneration and possibility to the rest of the world. And the world responded. They had prepared for 2 million visitors in its first year – 5 million came.
Following Cool Britannia and the Young British Artists in the 90s, Tate Modern blasted away the last vestiges of British stuffiness about contemporary art. To disguise the gaps in the collection,Mr Serotareplaced chronological hanging with athematic one(to muchcritical dismay). Instead of imitating competitors like the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Tate Modern rewrote the rules and set the tone for 21st-century museums.
From the momentousMatisse Picassoin 2002 toCézanne20 years later, it has delivered enough masterpieces to appease those sniffy abouthelter‑skeltersandswings. But its greatest triumph is undoubtedly the 300 sq metre Turbine Hall. The cavernous space has encouraged artists to expand their imaginations to fit. Louise Bourgeois’s giant spider,Maman, which first greeted visitors, returns for theanniversary celebrations.
From its earliest event, held for London taxi drivers, Tate Modern’s manifesto has been to make art accessible to all. Children draw on the floor, students hang out, families picnic. Mr Blair might have called it “the people’s palace”.
It has also sought to expand the canon,adding more global and female artiststo its collection, alongside major exhibitions ofFrida Kahlo,Georgia O’KeeffeandYayoi Kusama, the last of which broke record numbers in 2023. A Tracey Emin retrospective is billed for next year.
It hasn’t all been champagne and blockbusters. As with most cultural institutions, Brexit, thepandemicand afunding crisishave taken their toll. The gallery’sBP sponsorship, which ended in 2016, provoked a series ofprotestsfrom climate activists. And its success hasn’t done anyfavoursfor its less glamorous sister gallery, Tate Britain in Millbank.
It is a very different picture in the world at large than when Tate Modern first opened its doors. Where once we were basking in the post-millennial glow of Olafur Eliasson’ssetting sun (The Weather Project) in 2003, now we seem to be flailing in the darkness ofMirosław Bałka’s big black box, which transformed the Turbine Hall into an anxiety dream in 2009.
The National Gallery also marks a biganniversarythis year: on 10 May it turns 200. Tate Modern is still a whippersnapper by contrast. Over the first quarter of this century it has become part of the establishment without losing its edge – a hard act to keep up. But it is the job of modern art to evolve and challenge the status quo.
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