Turner Contemporary is an art gallery in Margate, Kent, England, intended as a contemporary arts space and catalyst for the regeneration of the town.[1][2] The title commemorates the association of the town with noted landscape painter J. M. W. Turner, who went to school there, and visited throughout his life.[3]
History
Architectural design
The building was designed by David Chipperfield,[4] whose design for the 3-storey, 20 metres (66 ft) high[5] gallery opened on 16 April 2011,[6] 14,000 people visited in the first weekend[7] and 500,000 in its first year.[8] In August 2013 the gallery received its millionth visitor.[9]
On 20 February 2020, Turner Contemporary became the first contemporary building to feature on a Bank of England note.[10]
Turner Contemporary is the largest dedicated visual arts venue in Kent.[11] It is a registered charity under English law.[12]
Recognition
In November 2011, the venue received an award from the British Guild of Travel Writers, for an outstanding tourism project.[13] Queen Elizabeth II visited Turner Contemporary on 11 November 2011, as part of a wider trip to Margate.[14]
Exhibitions
| Dates
|
Name
|
Featuring
|
| 22 February 2025 - 1st June 2025 (Current)
|
Resistance
|
An exhibition of photography about protest curated by Artist and Film Maker Steve McQueen[15]
|
| 28 September 2024 – 26 January 2025
|
Anya Gallaccio: preserve
|
Turner Contemporary presents 'preserve', the largest survey exhibition to date of British artist Anya Gallaccio.[16]
|
| 25 May 2024 - 1 September 2024
|
Ed Clark
|
The first institutional exhibition in Europe dedicated to pioneering artist Ed Clark (1926–2019)
|
| 3 February 2024 - 6 May 2024
|
Beyond Form: Lines of Abstraction, 1950-1970
|
This exhibition features art from 50 female artists working within abstract art. Artists included in the exhibition are Bridget Riley, Louise Bourgeois and Agnes Martin.[17]
|
| 7 October 2023 - 14 January 2024
|
In the Offing
|
A group exhibition edited by Mark Leckey around themes of the seaside, nostaligia and esoteric views of the future. Featured a number of video and sound installations as well as traditional painting.[18]
|
| 27 May 2023 - 10 September 2023
|
Beatriz Milhazes: Maresias
|
A solo exhibition by Beatriz Milhazes, a leading figure from the Brazilian abstract art movement Geração Oitenta (1980s Generation)[19]
|
Gallery
-
Close up of the roof
-
Turner Contemporary
-
Turner Contemporary
-
Construction April 2010 from the north
-
Construction April 2010 from the harbour
-
Under construction in 2009
References
- ^ "Turner Contemporary". Art Rabbit. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
- ^ Worthington, Caroline (July–August 2011). "Reviews — Turner Contemporary, Margate". Museums Journal. 111 (7/8): 46–49.
- ^ Darwent, Charles (25 January 2009). "Superabundant: A Celebration of Pattern, Turner Contemporary, Margate". The Independent. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
- ^ "New architect chosen for gallery". BBC.co.uk. 27 July 2006. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
- ^ "Chipperfield unveils Turner Contemporary design for Margate". Building Design. 19 June 2007. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
- ^ "Rendezvous: 'this plan needs a rethink'". Your Thanet News. 7 January 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
- ^ "Margate's Turner gallery has 45,500 visitors". BBC News. BBC. 26 April 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
A total of 14,000 people visited on the opening weekend
- ^ Beached and hard to reach
- ^ "Turner Contemporary greets millionth visitor". BBC News. BBC. 29 August 2013. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
- ^ "New £20 note featuring J. M. W Turner revealed by the Bank of England". the Guardian. 10 October 2019. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
- ^ "Victoria Pomery". Ebbsfleet Landmark. Archived from the original on 19 October 2009. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
- ^ "TURNER CONTEMPORARY, registered charity no. 1129974". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
- ^ "Margate's Turner Contemporary wins top award". BBC News. 8 November 2011. Retrieved 13 December 2024.
- ^ Hutchinson, Amanda (11 November 2011). "Royal Visit to Margate's Turner Contemporary". South East Tour Guides. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
- ^ Turner Contemporary. "Resistance".
- ^ The Guardian. "Anya Gallaccio: Preserve review – catch this show before its dazzling splendours decay".
- ^ Turner Contemporary. "Beyond Form: Lines of Abstraction, 1950-1970".
- ^ Turner Contemporary. "in the Offing".
- ^ Turner Contemporary. "Beatriz Milhazes: Maresias".
External links
|
|---|
| Paintings |
- Lambeth Palace (1790)
- The Rising Squall (1792)
- Interior of a Romanesque Church (c. 1795–1800)
- Landscape with Windmill and Rainbow (c. 1795–1800)
- Diana and Callisto (c. 1796)
- Fishermen at Sea (1796)
- Interior of a Gothic Church (c. 1797)
- Limekiln at Coalbrookdale (c. 1797)
- Moonlight, a Study at Millbank (1797)
- Dunstanburgh Castle (1798)
- Aeneas and the Sibyl (c. 1798)
- Buttermere Lake (1798)
- Caernarvon Castle (c. 1798)
- Coniston Fells (1798)
- Shipping by a Breakwater (1798)
- Tivoli and the Roman Campagna (c. 1798)
- View of a Town (c. 1798)
- Dolbadarn Castle (1798–1799)
- Self-Portrait (c. 1799)
- View in Wales (c. 1799–1800)
- A Beech Wood with Gypsies round a Campfire (c. 1800)
- A Beech Wood with Gypsies Seated in the Distance (c. 1800)
- Landscape with Lake and Fallen Tree (c. 1800)
- View on Clapham Common (c. 1800–1805)
- The Fifth Plague of Egypt (1800)
- Dutch Boats in a Gale (1801)
- Fishermen Upon a Lee-Shore in Squally Weather (1802)
- Salisbury Cathedral from the Cloisters (1802)
- The Tenth Plague of Egypt (1802)
- Ben Lomond Mountains, Scotland (1802)
- Jason (1802)
- Ships Bearing Up for Anchorage (1802)
- Bonneville, Savoy (1803)
- Calais Pier (1803)
- The Festival of the Opening of the Vintage at Mâcon (1803)
- Fishing Boats Entering Calais Harbour (1803)
- Boats Carrying Out Anchors (1804)
- The Destruction of Sodom (1805)
- The Deluge (1805)
- The Shipwreck (1805)
- Windsor Castle from the Thames (1805)
- Fall of the Rhine at Schaffhausen (1806)
- The Thames at Weybridge (1806)
- Walton Bridges (1806)
- Cliveden on Thames (1807)
- A Country Blacksmith (1807)
- Linlithgow Palace (1807)
- Newark Abbey (1807)
- Sun Rising through Vapour (1807)
- Two Captured Danish Ships Entering Portsmouth Harbour (1807)
- The Junction of the Thames and the Medway (1807)
- The Battle of Trafalgar (1808)
- The Forest of Bere (1808)
- Pope's Villa at Twickenham (1808)
- Margate (1808)
- Sheerness as Seen from the Nore (1808)
- The Unpaid Bill (1808)
- View of Richmond Hill and Bridge (1808)
- Fishing Upon the Blythe Sand (1809)
- The Garreteer's Petition (1809)
- Harvest Dinner, Kingston Bank (1809)
- London from Greenwich Park (1809)
- Ploughing Up Turnips (1809)
- The Trout Stream (1809)
- Sun Setting through Vapour (1809)
- The Fish Market at Hastings Beach (1810)
- High Street, Oxford (1810)
- The Wreck of a Transport Ship (1810)
- Apollo and Python (1811)
- Somer Hill, Tonbridge (1811)
- Saltash with the Water Ferry (1811)
- Hulks on the Tamar (1811)
- St Mawes at the Pilchard Season (1812)
- Teignmouth (1812)
- Hannibal and his Army Crossing the Alps (1812)
- Frosty Morning (1813)
- Dido and Aeneas (1814)
- Dido building Carthage (1815)
- Crossing the Brook (1815)
- The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire (1817)
- Raby Castle (1817)
- Dort or Dordrecht (1818)
- The Field of Waterloo (1818)
- A First Rate Taking in Stores (1818)
- Richmond Hill (1819)
- Entrance of the Meuse (1819)
- Rome, from the Vatican (1820)
- George IV at St Giles's, Edinburgh (1822)
- The Battle of Trafalgar (1822)
- What You Will! (1822)
- The Bay of Baiae (1823)
- The Harbour of Dieppe (1825)
- Cologne (1826)
- Forum Romanum (1826)
- Mortlake Terrace (1826)
- Port Ruysdael (1826)
- Rembrandt's Daughter (1827)
- Scene in Derbyshire (1827)
- The Chain Pier, Brighton (1828)
- Chichester Canal (1828)
- East Cowes Castle (1828)
- Palestrina (1828)
- Regulus (1828)
- View of Orvieto (1828)
- Vision of Medea (1828)
- The Banks of the Loire (1829)
- The Loretto Necklace (1829)
- Ulysses Deriding Polyphemus (1829)
- Calais Sands at Low Water (1830)
- The Evening Star (1830)
- Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence (1830)
- Pilate Washing his Hands (1830)
- Caligula's Palace and Bridge (1831)
- Lifeboat and Manby Apparatus Going Off to a Stranded Vessel (1831)
- Van Tromp's Barge Entering the Texel (1831)
- Christ Driving the Traders from the Temple (1832)
- Childe Harold's Pilgrimage - Italy (1832)
- The Prince of Orange Landing at Torbay (1832)
- Helvoetsluys (1832)
- Staffa, Fingal's Cave (1832)
- Bridge of Sighs, Ducal Palace and Custom House (1833)
- Quillebeuf, Mouth of the Seine (1833)
- Rotterdam Ferry-Boat (1833)
- The Fountain of Indolence (1834)
- The Golden Bough (1834)
- Venice: The Dogana and San Giorgio Maggiore (1834)
- St Michael's Mount, Cornwall (1834)
- Wreckers, Coast of Northumberland (1834)
- The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons (1835)
- A Disaster at Sea (1835)
- Keelmen Heaving in Coals by Moonlight (1835)
- Line Fishing, Off Hastings (1835)
- Rome, From Mount Aventine (1835)
- Venice, from the Porch of Madonna della Salute (c. 1835)
- Juliet and her Nurse (1836)
- The Parting of Hero and Leander (1837)
- The Fighting Temeraire (1838)
- Fishing Boats with Hucksters Bargaining for Fish (1838)
- Ovid Banished from Rome (1838)
- Phryne Going to the Public Baths as Venus (1838)
- Agrippina Landing with the Ashes of Germanicus (1839)
- Cicero at His Villa at Tusculum (1839)
- Modern Rome – Campo Vaccino (1839)
- The Slave Ship (1840)
- Neapolitan Fisher Girls Surprised Bathing by Moonlight (1840)
- Venice, the Bridge of Sighs (1840)
- Venice from the Giudecca (1840)
- Schloss Rosenau (1841)
- Campo Santo (1842)
- Snow Storm: Steam-Boat off a Harbour's Mouth (1842)
- The Dogana, San Giorgio, Citella, from the Steps of the Europa (1842)
- The Blue Rigi (1842)
- The Red Rigi (1842)
- Peace – Burial at Sea (1842)
- War. The Exile and the Rock Limpet (1842)
- Light and Colour (1843)
- The Opening of the Wallhalla (1843)
- St Benedetto, Looking Towards Fusina (1843)
- The Sun of Venice Going to Sea (1843)
- Venice, Maria della Salute (1844)
- Approach to Venice (1844)
- Venice Quay, Ducal Palace (1844)
- Ostend (1844)
- Rain, Steam and Speed – The Great Western Railway (1844)
- The Arrival of Louis-Philippe at Portsmouth (1845)
- Sunrise with Sea Monsters (1845)
- Norham Castle, Sunrise (c. 1845)
- Seascape: Folkestone (c. 1845)
- Whalers (1845)
- Whalers Entangled in Flaw Ice (1846)
- Queen Mab's Cave (1846)
- The Hero of a Hundred Fights (1847)
- The Wreck Buoy (1849)
- Mercury Sent to Admonish Aeneas (1850)
- The Departure of the Fleet (1850)
- The Beacon Light (unknown)
|
|---|
| Prints | |
|---|
| Museums | |
|---|
| Related | |
|---|
|
Authority control databases |
|---|
| International | |
|---|
| National | |
|---|
| Other | |
|---|