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    50% off exhibitions Beautiful paintings, sculpture and decorative art from the 13th century to the present day.
    START : 15 November 2020
    END : 25 November 2020
    EVENT CATEGORY : Exhibition
    VENUE NAME : Tate Modern
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    Exhibitions Details

    This exhibition is a rare chance to experience two of Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Mirror Rooms. These immersive installations will transport you into Kusama’s unique vision of endless reflections.

    Infinity Mirrored Room – Filled with the Brilliance of Life is one of Kusama’s largest installations to date and was made for her 2012 retrospective at the gallery. It is shown alongside Chandelier of Grief, a room which creates the illusion of a boundless universe of rotating crystal chandeliers.

    A small presentation of photographs – some on display for the first time – provides historical context for the global phenomenon that Kusama’s mirrored rooms have become today.

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    Art Credentials

    • This exhibition is a rare chance to experience two of Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Mirror Rooms. These immersive installations will transport you into Kusama’s.
    • Architectural elements and armatures. Bhabha’s multifaceted work explores colonialism, war, displacement and the memory of home. For her first major survey exhibition in Europe.
    • These immersive installations will transport you into Kusama’s. This exhibition is a rare chance to experience two of Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Mirror Rooms.
    Wandau Museum Now Open
    DON’T MISS THE OPPORTUNITY

    Wandau Museum Now Open

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    Permanent Collection

    Housing a national collection, Tate Britain is the world centre for the study and display of British art. Highlights include a Turner collection of more than 300 paintings and thousands of watercolours, with considerable space also dedicated to two artists of the Romantic age, Constable and William Blake.

    The national tradition of portraiture is represented in a fine collection of Elizabethan works, as well as those by Gainsborough, Reynolds, and Hogarth 'the father of English painting' whose much-loved Rake's Progress sequence remains a popular draw.

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