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Timed tickets

Timed tickets required for Tate reopening July 27

Timed tickets
All four of Tate’s venues will reopen to the public on July 27. Images courtesy of Tate

LONDON – Tate Modern, Tate Britain, Tate Liverpool and Tate St. Ives will once again be open to all beginning Monday, July 27. Visitors will finally be able to reunite with their favorite works by artists from across the centuries and around the world.

Hundreds of artworks are being uncovered, reinstalled and switched back on, including Kara Walker’s urgent and timely Fons Americanus, Steve McQueen’s hugely ambitious Year 3, and major exhibitions of Andy Warhol, Aubrey Beardsley and Naum Gabo, all of which have been specially extended into the autumn. These join a host of much-loved works from Tate’s collection, including paintings by David Hockney, Chris Ofili and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, sculptures by Barbara Hepworth, Sarah Lucas and Saloua Raouda Chocair, and installations by Mona Hatoum, Cildo Meireles and Yinka Shonibare CBE, among many others.

“I’m thrilled to be reopening our galleries and can’t wait to welcome visitors back,” said Maria Balshaw, director of Tate. “While you’ve been away, we have worked hard to ensure our spaces are safe and accessible for everybody. We have also extended many major exhibitions and commissions, all of which feel as powerful and relevant today as they did when they first opened.”

As the galleries reopen, every precaution has been taken to make the experience safe and enjoyable. To ensure people can keep a safe distance from each other, all visitors now need to book a timed ticket in advance to visit the collection displays or exhibitions. This can be done through the booking system at tate.org.uk/visit.

As well as social distancing measures, an enhanced cleaning regime is in operation and hand sanitizers have been installed at key locations. Visitors are recommended to wear face coverings, protective screens are in place at desks, cloakrooms are temporarily closed, and only card or contactless payments are accepted. As ever, Tate’s staff are on hand to offer help and advice to all visitors.

The one-way routes through the displays offer access to an enormous variety of art, and visitors are free to visit some or all of the displays on their chosen route. All routes also include access to toilets and opportunities to shop and buy food and drink.

Visitors to Tate Modern can book tickets for the landmark Andy Warhol exhibition, which continues until Nov. 15, or one of two free routes through the collection, one starting in the Natalie Bell Building and offering access to all the displays, and the other focusing on the Blavatnik Building. All routes start at Kara Walker’s epic Hyundai Commission, which has been extended until 8 November 2020.

At Tate Britain, visitors can book tickets for the Aubrey Beardsley retrospective, extended until Sept. 20, or for one of two free collection routes, the first offering a journey through British art from the 16th to the 19th century and the second covering modern and contemporary British art. Both routes also include Steve McQueen’s Year 3 installation, which has been extended to Jan. 31.

Tate Liverpool’s free one-way route through the building includes a newly unveiled installation by Mikhail Karikis, open until  Nov. 22, as well as collection displays of international modern art and the popular Op Art in Focus display.

Tate St. Ives’ one-way route encompasses both its Modern Art and St. Ives display and its acclaimed Naum Gabo exhibition, now extended until Sept. 27. Joint tickets are available with the stunning Barbara Hepworth Museum and Sculpture Garden, which also reopens on Monday.

 

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