The Daily Telegraph

Tate Britain to bring back picture labels to help public better understand the art

- By Hannah Furness

TATE Britain is to rehang its entire collection as it reinstates proper labels explaining what the art is about, as its director says he wants to invite audiences to understand the works properly.

Alex Farquharso­n, who took over Tate Britain 18 months ago after the surprise departure of Penelope Curtis, said he would be grouping paintings into themes in an attempt to improve the audience experience.

Curtis, who left the gallery in 2015 after five years at the helm, had faced criticism over her exhibition­s, with strident calls for her dismissal described at the time as “verging on a vendetta”.

Her decisions included hanging the Tate Britain collection in chronologi­cal order and overseeing a change in labelling to cut down on informatio­n to let visitors interpret more of the art for themselves.

Chris Stevens, curator, explained in 2013: “Your response is as valid as our knowledge, and this re-hang presents a sort of release for the artist and their work from this encumbranc­e of academic protocols.”

One art historian called the concept of equating specialist knowledge with guesses from the public “chilling”.

In an interview with the Evening Standard yesterday, as Tate announced its plans for 2018, Mr Farquharso­n confirmed he advocated labels once again offering interpreta­tion of the art.

“If one frames art that way it’s an invitation to an audience to understand the work without prior knowledge of art historical categories,” he said. He added the chronologi­cal collection will be rehung thematical­ly, in a key reversal of the old guard’s ways.

He added: “So there could be big themes, like London as an urban space in the 18th century or Britain in the post-war age of anxiety.

“We want to look at how social factors caused art to take the forms it did.”

The labelling at Tate Britain, a source said, has “kept evolving” since the 2013 policy, with experts quietly reintroduc­ing more informatio­n even before Mr Farquharso­n’s arrival.

Tate Britain’s plans for 2018 include the first exhibition of the work of Preraphael­ite Edward Burne-jones to be held in London in 40 years.

Another show, All Too Human, will explore the “intense experience of life” through figurative painting and the works of Francis Bacon, Lucian Freud, RB Kitaj and Paula Rego.

Tate Modern will also show video and textile art from Joan Jonas and Anni Albers alongside its blockbuste­r Picasso exhibition.

Tate St Ives is to explore 35 female artists, led by the works of Virginia Woolf.

 ??  ?? Alex Farquharso­n, director of Tate Britain, with a work by John Singleton Copley
Alex Farquharso­n, director of Tate Britain, with a work by John Singleton Copley

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