Tate 2021 season: Yayoi Kusama's Infinity Mirror Rooms and Turner Prize-winner Lubaina Himid exhibition announced

Yayoi Kusama's Infinity Mirrored Rooms will be at Tate Modern next year
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Solo exhibitions for Yayoi Kusama and Turner Prize-winning artist Lubaina Himid will lead Tate's blockbuster 2021 exhibition, unveiled today.

Kusama’s Infinity Mirror Rooms — an immersive installation where Londoners will be able to experience endless reflections of themselves — was initially intended to open in May this year. This display and Himid's theatrical retrospective will both be on show at Tate Modern next year.

A major show about Rodin and a retrospective about one of the greatest 20th-century painters, Philip Guston, will also run through the spring and summer, alongside landmark exhibitions exploring Britain’s relationship with the Caribbean and William Hogarth’s depictions of 18th-century life.

The spring 2021 season will kick-off at Tate Modern with an exhibition about Canadian-American artist Guston.During his 50-year career, the painter — who died in 1980 — created some of the most influential artworks of the 20th century, including Last Piece, The Studio and Gladiators.

In the summer, Tate Modern will host The EY Exhibition: The Making Of Rodin offering a look at the Frenchman as a radical artist, whose clay and plaster works welcomed in a new age of sculpture before he died in 1917.

Later in the year, Tate Britain will open two exhibitions detailing the connection between art and social history.

Hogarth and Europe will show how 18th-century urban life was captured by the English satirist and social critic and his contemporaries in Paris, Amsterdam and Venice. Works in the Britain And The Caribbean exhibition will span half a century. It will celebrate artists from the Caribbean who settled in Britain as well as artists who have spent their career addressing Caribbean themes and heritage.

Tate is opening all four of its galleries on July 27 following months of closure due to the pandemic.

Tate director Maria Balshaw said: “Art and culture play vital roles in our lives, and many of us have been craving that irreplaceable feeling of being face-to-face with a great work of art. Our number one priority remains that everyone stays safe and well, so we will continue to monitor the situation in the weeks ahead, work closely with Government and colleagues, and make all the changes necessary for a safe reopening.”

Other 2021 highlights include a retrospective on Paula Rego, the acclaimed Portuguese-British artist, at Tate Britain. It will run alongside Hope. Struggle. Change: Photographing Britain and the World 1945-79, a show of over 300 documentary images from the period. Anicka Yi is creating the Hyundai Commission for Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall.

The National Gallery today became the first of the big institutions to reopen its doors following the easing of lockdown measures.

The exhibition Titian: Love, Desire, Death reopened after it previously closed three days into its run.

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