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The Collection/The Curator

The Collection/The Curator. Henry Tate, 1819-1899.

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The Collection/The Curator

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  1. The Collection/The Curator

  2. Henry Tate, 1819-1899 First benefactor - pays £80,000 towards the cost of building as well - donates 65 paintings including Millais' Ophelia and J.W. Waterhouse's The Lady of ShalottThese 65 paintings, together with works from the National Gallery, formed the nucleus of the British Collection.

  3. The Collection Tate holds the national collection of British art from 1500 to the present day and international modern and contemporary art. The collection includes nearly 70,000 artworks by over 3,000 artists and grows every year.

  4. Acquisitions In the financial year to March 2011, for example, the total value of purchases was £3.9 million. Of the £3.9 million, £3.4 million came from charitable funds connected to the Tate and individuals, and £0.5 million from Tate’s general funds. In 2010–11 Tate also received donations of works of art valued at £4.3 million.

  5. Pablo PicassoFemme AssisePresd'uneFenetre, 1932Sold at Sotheby’s for £28.6 million

  6. Alfred H. Barr,Diagram, 1936

  7. Inaugural ‘Hang’ When the gallery opened in 2000, the collections were not displayed in chronological order but were rather arranged thematically into four broad groups each allocated a wing on levels 3 and 5 (now levels 2 and 4): 'History/Memory/Society' 'Nude/Action/Body' 'Landscape/Matter/Environment' 'Still Life/Object/Real Life'

  8. ‘Poetry and Dream’ The displays in Poetry and Dream show how contemporary art grows from, reconnects with, and can provide fresh insights into the art of the past. The large room at the heart of the wing is devoted to surrealism, while the surrounding displays look at other artists who, in different ways, have responded to or diverged from surrealism, or explored related themes such as the world of dreams, the unconscious and archetypal myth. These displays also show how characteristically surrealist techniques such as free association, the use of chance, biomorphic form and bizarre symbolism have been reinvigorated in new contexts and through new media, often at far remove from the intentions of their pioneers.

  9. International Surrealism exhibition, London, 1936

  10. Salvador DaliMetamorphosis of Narcissus, 1937Purchased from the artist by Edward JamesOn loan to Tate from 1958, acquired in 1979

  11. Rene MagritteNot to be Reproduced, 1937

  12. Sir Norman ReidDirector, 1964–1979 A trained painter, Reid strengthened the collection, particularly in the area of early twentieth-century European art, acquiring outstanding works by artists including Brancusi, Mondrian and Dalí. Reid also forged strong personal relationships with artists, which led to a number of important works being donated to Tate, including Rothko’s Seagram murals, and work by Hepworth, Ben Nicholson, Naum Gabo and Henry Moore. During his Directorship, the much needed North East Quadrant expansion was completed in 1979, vastly increasing the exhibition space at the Millbank site.

  13. ‘Chance Meeting on a Dissecting Table of a Sewing Machine and an Umbrella’ IsidoreDucasse, known by his pseudonym Comte de Lautréamont, a late 19th-century writer believed to be the precursor of Surrealism.

  14. Giorgio de ChiricoThe Uncertainty of the Poet, 1913

  15. JannisKounellisUntitled, 1979

  16. Man Ray,Cadeau, 1921/1972

  17. Melanie SmithXilitla, 2010

  18. Frieze Purchased with funds provided by the 2011 Outset / Frieze Art Fair Fund to benefit the Tate Collection 2012 Outset fund: £120,000 Frances Morris: ‘You can’t buy on spec’ • Tate’s Latin-American ambitions • Vertical film format • Edward James

  19. www.youtube.com/watch?v=puFki4tS08A

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