Tate Britain photograph

Tate Britain

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AddressMillbank, Westminster, London SW1P 4RG, United Kingdom
Hours Closed ⋅ Opens 10AM
Directors Alex Farquharson
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2045443
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About Tate Britain


Tate Britain is an art museum on Millbank in the City of Westminster in London. It is part of the Tate network of galleries in England, with Tate Modern, Tate Liverpool and Tate St Ives. It is the oldest gallery in the network, having opened in 1897.

Where is the Tate Britain

Tate Britain Map
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Tate Britain has rehung its art collection: What can we learn?

Tate Britain has rehung its art collection: What can we learn?
May 23,2023 7:10 am

...By Katie RazzallCulture and media editor, BBC NewsThe Tate Britain gallery on London has unveiled a complete rehang of the world s greatest collection of British art...

Turner Prize 2023: Windrush and Covid pandemic inspires nominees

Turner Prize 2023: Windrush and Covid pandemic inspires nominees
Apr 27,2023 8:00 am

... Alex Farquharson, the director of Tate Britain and chair of the Turner Prize jury, told the artworks shared common themes...

Turner Prize: Windrush memorial artist Veronica Ryan wins for 'poetic' sculptures

Turner Prize: Windrush memorial artist Veronica Ryan wins for 'poetic' sculptures
Dec 7,2022 3:00 pm

... Tate Britain director Alex Farquharson, who co-chaired this year s jury, said her work had " a quiet but very compelling presence"...

How Instagram opened a new world for Welsh quilting

How Instagram opened a new world for Welsh quilting
Apr 16,2022 3:45 am

... " Some quilts in Ms Jones collection, as well as a number of quilts from National Museum Wales have been on loan to Tate Britain in London...

Turner Prize 2022: Trafalgar Square whipped cream artist among nominees

Turner Prize 2022: Trafalgar Square whipped cream artist among nominees
Apr 12,2022 12:40 pm

... Alex Farquharson, director of Tate Britain and co-chair of the Turner Prize jury, said this year s shortlist was " excitingly rich and varied"...

Pork pies, curry and pizza - a history of tasty parliamentary plots

Pork pies, curry and pizza - a history of tasty parliamentary plots
Jan 20,2022 7:09 pm

... But the issue was central in the mind of three relatively unknown Conservatives - MPs Douglas Carswell and Mark Reckless and MEP Daniel Hannan - who were meeting in the Tate Britain gallery cafe, a 15 minute stroll from Parliament, to hatch their plans...

Coronavirus: Fake Jeff Bezos news and other misleading stories unpicked

Coronavirus: Fake Jeff Bezos news and other misleading stories unpicked
Apr 18,2020 10:15 pm

... However, as the Bank of England pointed out, when the design was unveiled, the Corona Virus is actually the rotunda of the Tate Britain art gallery, during the cell phone tower is Margate lighthouse...

8 new TV shows to life on lockdown

8 new TV shows to life on lockdown
Apr 18,2020 5:23 pm

... episodes of the Andy Warhol exhibition at the Tate Modern (photo)-which took less than a week of treasures before you closed as well as the Young Rembrandt to the Ashmolean in Oxford, and visits to the British Museum and the Tate Britain...

How Instagram opened a new world for Welsh quilting

Feb 16,2020 10:22 am

They were once unloved and discarded as worthless old blankets.

But after a boom in younger people taking up quilting during the pandemic and posting pictures of intricate throws on Social Media , Welsh quilts are in vogue.

Displayed in art galleries and museums, some of the throws are selling for thousands.

One Woman who spent years trying to save quilts from landfill says she felt like a " bit like a crusader".

When Jen Jones , from Stockbridge, Massachusetts, arrived in the UK in 1970, she found people were throwing quilts away.

" Huge numbers were lost because people tossed them out in the 60s and 70s as heavy old bedding, " said Ms Jones, who runs the Welsh Quilt Centre in Lampeter, Ceredigion, and now has over 400 in her private collection.

" I found them on Hot Water tanks and over tractors, " She Said , adding she bought some for £1 from " under tables". " It really upset me, " she added.

But interest in Welsh quilts has grown over The Past decade, and boosted further in recent years.

Quilting became a hobby as a way to pass time during lockdowns, with people sharing their creations on Social Media . An increased Focus On sustainability has also contributed to the popularity of The Craft .

Many now share Ms Jones' passion for the throws, with some antique quilts made by highly skilled women now being sold for thousands to collectors around The World .

" When I first started there were hundreds of them going spare and not being looked after. That isn't the case now, " Ms Jones said.

Instagram is awash with images of beautiful quilts, made of pieces of material cut into shapes to form patterns, and quilt-inspired looks have become a fashion trend.

" Instagram has opened up a whole new quilting world, " says Elen Phillips, curator at St Fagans National Museum of History, in Cardiff.

" I think Social Media has played an important part in that resurgence, especially among Young People . "

Ms Phillips, Principal Curator of Contemporary and Community History at The Museum , said the climate crisis had added to the demand for handmade, quality goods.

" There's more of an awareness of things like our carbon footprint, consumerism of fabric and traceability of the things we wear and have in Our Home , " she says.

In addition, there is an appreciation for making things by hand, and for knowledge that has been handed down.

For Bridget Taylor, 46, from Cardiff, quilting is all about keeping a Family Tradition alive.

'I'm finishing my mum's quilts'

" My grandmothers, my great aunts, my great grandmas, They all quilted, " She Said .

Her mother died Last Summer and she is finishing some of her quilts. " I have eight kids. So (I Am ) making sure each of them has an heirloom quilt to themselves, " She Said .

Originally from northern West Virginia in the United States , Ms Taylor said a lot of the Welsh patterns are very similar to those used back In America , and many told A Story .

She is attending a Saturday Morning workshop hosted by Cardiff Quilters. The all-female group meets twice a month and has 45 members.

Barbara Turton, 76, a former chairwoman of The Group from Caerphilly, has witnessed the growing interest in quilting in Wales.

" In the early 90s, there were probably two groups, " she says, adding that now the Quilter's Guild lists 12 groups in South and Mid Wales .

She Said the quilts were now " becoming appreciated" with some selling for a lot of money.

" By The Time I realised what was around, I couldn't afford it, " she laughs.

From about 1850, up until the outbreak of The Second World War , quilting was a skilled occupation for women seeking to supplement their families' income.

Quilting classes, taught by The Most established quilters in the area, were established in the depressed industrial valleys of South Wales in the 20s and 30s to produce very high-end quilts.

They were sold to upmarket department stores in Cardiff and London , or made for big hotels such as Claridges.

" It was an extraordinary time and the quilts had to be of the highest quality, " Ms Jones said. " For a lot of women who went into it, it was a salvation really, it was not a hobby. "

Highly prized

Historians also believe the Welsh flannel geometric quilts influenced Amish quilts, many of which are now highly prized.

It is these Welsh Flannel Quilts , mainly from 1850 onwards, collector Ms Jones believes, that will become really iconic.

" I've heard More Than one person call several of our quilts 'Rothkos', " She Said , " It is something that strikes people, that They are works of art. "

" The really good ones were done by professionals, and so The Work is exquisite. . if you have one, keep it as it will go up in value. "

The Most prized Welsh quilts are primarily known for their beautiful stitching patterns, the technique and the design. They were very densely quilted, with almost every inch of surface stitched.

Inspiration was often derived from nature and the designs frequently featured a central circle and recurring themes like veined leaves or hearts.

Ms Jones said there was now " huge interest" in quilts, not just from collectors In America , Japan and Australia, where quilting is Big Business , but increasingly also in the United Kingdom .

An antique Amish quilt In America can go for $90,000, she says; the equivalent here would now go for £5,000, she says, after being considered worthless for decades.

Few of the older quilts are dated or signed.

" They 're made quite unselfconsciously, " says Ms Phillips. But there are ways of suggesting a quilt comes from a particular area. " The trained eye can say it is indicative of a certain person's work, or trained by someone in particular. "

More often than not, quilts come to The Museum through Family Members who will have associated stories with The Quilt .

" It's very often through those family stories that we establish provenance, " Ms Phillips says. " They are literally multi-layered in the stories and narratives that They hold. That's why They are so fascinating. "

Some quilts in Ms Jones' collection, as well as A Number of quilts from National Museum Wales have been on loan to Tate Britain in London .

" They 're being appreciated by a new audience now and are being considered in a different light, " Ms Phillips says.

" They really do warrant their place in art galleries because They are stunningly beautiful. The skill level is Tremendous . . They were made for a bed but wow, do They look amazing on a stark gallery wall. "



Source of news: bbc.com

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