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Free Display

Media Networks

See how artists in Tate’s collection have responded to the impact of mass media

  • About
  • Rooms
  • Highlights
A group of people looking at a cylindrical tower of televisions

© Lee Mawdsley

Look at some of the ways in which artists over the past hundred years have responded to the impact of mass media and the ever-changing technologies that shape our world.

Including a diverse range of techniques and materials – from posters and paint to analogue and digital technology – the display raises questions around feminism, consumerism and the cult of celebrity.

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Tate Modern
Natalie Bell Building Level 4 East

Getting Here

Ongoing

Free

12 rooms in Media Networks

Andy Warhol and Mark Bradford

Andy Warhol and Mark Bradford

These artworks raise questions about consumerism, identity, and the power of mass media

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Mark Bradford, Los Moscos 2004. Tate. © Mark Bradford.

Modern Times

Modern Times

Feel the excitement and anxiety generated by the modern city

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Fernand Léger, The Acrobat and his Partner 1948. Tate. © ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2024.

León Ferrari

León Ferrari

Explore an artist who was central to debates about art and politics in Latin America and question what newspapers tell us about society and politics

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León Ferrari, [no title] 2001, reproduced 2007. Tate. © Leon Ferrari.

Everyday Mythologies

Everyday Mythologies

The works in this room explore consumerism, mass-produced objects and advertising as the emerging visual language of the 1960s and 1970s

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Hervé Télémaque The Weathervane 1969 © Tate Photography

ARTIST ROOMS: Roy Lichtenstein

ARTIST ROOMS: Roy Lichtenstein

Roy Lichtenstein was known in the 1960s for his paintings of comic strips. In these later prints, he deliberately hides his trademark imagery under abstract patterns

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Roy Lichtenstein, Reflections on Girl 1990. ARTIST ROOMS Tate and National Galleries of Scotland. Lent by The Roy Lichtenstein Foundation Collection 2015. © Estate of Roy Lichtenstein/DACS 2024.

Cildo Meireles

Cildo Meireles

Overwhelm your senses with Babel, Meireles’ 2001 artwork, which explores information overload and failed communication

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A large tower of individual radios lit with blue light

Cildo Meireles Babel (detail) 2001 Photo: Tate Photography

Ming Wong and Tseng Kwong Chi

Ming Wong and Tseng Kwong Chi

Discover two artists who use costume and performance to play with constructions of race, nationality and gender

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A person looks at their reflection in a mirror. Another person watches from behind, holding a handbag. There are captions at the bottom of the image which read 'I'm white! White!'

Ming Wong Life of Imitation 2009, video still. Courtesy of the Artist and Vitamin Creative Space

A view from Buenos Aires

A view from Buenos Aires

Discover artworks that explore organisational systems, communications and mass media

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Victor Grippo, Energy of a Potato (or Untitled or Energy) 1972. Tate. © The estate of Victor Grippo.

Beyond Pop

Beyond Pop

Artists from across the world have borrowed images from the mass media to comment on social and political issues

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Evelyne Axell, Valentine 1966. Tate. © ADAGP, Paris / DACS, London 2024.

Painting and Mass Media

Painting and Mass Media

Witness contemporary painters who use images from the mass media as a source of inspiration

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Wilhelm Sasnal, Gaddafi 3 2011. Tate. © Wilhelm Sasnal, courtesy Sadie Coles HQ.

Guerrilla Girls

Guerrilla Girls

This display shows the work of the anonymous feminist collective who use daring text and phrases to expose injustice in the art world and beyond

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Photograph of Guerrilla Girls artworks installed on the walls of a gallery space

Photo © Tate (Jai Monaghan)

Martin Kippenberger

Martin Kippenberger

These rebellious and iconoclastic works reuse imagery from popular visual culture, including art by other artists

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Photo © Tate (Matt Greenwood)

Guerrilla Girls, Do Women Have To Be Naked To Get Into the Met. Museum?  1989

The Guerrilla Girls are an anonymous group who describe themselves as feminist activist artists. They use facts, humor and visuals to expose gender and racial discrimination in politics, art, film, and popular culture. This poster, highlighting the lack of women artists in the Metropolitan Museum’s collection in New York, was designed as a billboard. It was commissioned by the Public Art Fund in New York but was rejected. The Guerrilla Girls then paid to put it on the side of New York City buses to make sure it would still be seen. Since forming in 1984, Guerilla Girls have been involved in hundreds of projects all over the world. Their identities remain unknown.

Gallery label, July 2020

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Roy Lichtenstein, Whaam!  1963

Whaam! is based on an image Lichtenstein found in a 1962 DC comic, All American Men of War. Lichtenstein often used art from comics and adverts in his paintings. He saw the act of taking an existing image and changing the context as a way of transforming it’s meaning. Lichtenstein was interested in emotional subjects, such as love and war. His work takes on these themes in a distant and impersonal way.

Gallery label, July 2020

2/6
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Cildo Meireles, Babel  2001

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Tseng Kwong Chi, London, England (Tower Bridge)  1983

Tseng Kwong Chi’s work explores cultural difference and belonging. He uses re-enactment to confront and subvert societal constructions of race and identity. Tseng used a large-format camera and shutter release cable to stage self-portraits at tourist sites in the US and Europe. He wore a ‘Zhongshan suit’ or ‘Mao suit’ (a tunic-style suit with a flipped collar) to adopt the identity of a Chinese government official. Tseng’s performance reveals the prejudice of observers, who may assume he is a communist foreign dignitary visiting a famous Western landmark. This portrayal contrasts with Tseng’s identity as an artist living and working in New York.

Gallery label, November 2022

4/6
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Charline von Heyl, Untitled  2011

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Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries (Young-Hae Chang, Marc Voge), TRAILER  2010

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Highlights

P78793: Do Women Have To Be Naked To Get Into the Met. Museum?
Guerrilla Girls Do Women Have To Be Naked To Get Into the Met. Museum? 1989
T00897: Whaam!
Roy Lichtenstein Whaam! 1963
T14041: Babel
Cildo Meireles Babel 2001
P14982: London, England (Tower Bridge)
Tseng Kwong Chi London, England (Tower Bridge) 1983
T13994: Untitled
Charline von Heyl Untitled 2011
T13639: TRAILER
Young-Hae Chang Heavy Industries (Young-Hae Chang, Marc Voge) TRAILER 2010

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