Essayer OR - Gratuit

Picture this National Gallery is on a roll, but could Tate have lost its mojo?

The Guardian

|

September 13, 2025

When a national institution sounds like Spinal Tap, you know it's in trouble.

- Jonathan Jones

Picture this National Gallery is on a roll, but could Tate have lost its mojo?

When a national institution sounds like Spinal Tap, you know it's in trouble. Recently, Tate channeled the mythic rock band's claim that its audience was not shrinking, just "becoming more selective".

In response to a decline in visitor numbers and a cash crisis leading to redundancies, the museum group emphasized "record numbers of young visitors" to Tate Modern, for who cares about all those uncool, absent visitors above the age of 35?

Yet in the summer, the Tate director, Maria Balshaw, blamed the museum group's problems on a dearth of 16-24 year old visitors from continental Europe. So they appeal to youth, but the wrong youth?

At last, this week, Tate Modern will open a blockbuster show that might attract paying adults. But Theatre Picasso draws almost entirely on its own collection of the modernist giant's works, which should be on permanent view in its free displays anyway, albeit for some time they have not.

It's a far cry from past exhibitions of Picasso and Matisse, Gauguin, Rauschenberg, and in 2022 Cézanne, boasting superb loans from museums all over the world. Why has Tate seemed to become so small?

PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Guardian

The Guardian

The Guardian

'I remember my uncle, whose death in Gaza we sometimes envied'

It was 6am on Saturday 7 October 2023. Half awake, I called out in a hoarse voice to my two sisters, who were sleeping on their beds next to me: \"Enas, Remas, wake up-you have school.\"

time to read

6 mins

October 11, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Palestinians return to find what is left of their homes

As Abdel Fattah al-Kurdi made the long journey back to Gaza City, he found himself getting lost.

time to read

3 mins

October 11, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Is mass tourism waking up from its Magaluf hangover?

The swish seafront hotels and freshly planted palms on the promenade might tempt any unwary holidaymaker to book in for Mallorca's Calvià beach. But step out of the back door and the resort is still firmly Magaluf, as it is better known-boozed-up Britain in Spain, with cocktails by the pint.

time to read

4 mins

October 11, 2025

The Guardian

Will taxpayers get the £122m paid for useless hospital gowns?

The five-year unravelling of Britain's most high-profile Covid contracts scandal involving a baroness, her husband and multimillion-pound government deals accelerated last week with a high court judgment against the company linked to the former Tory peer Michelle Mone.

time to read

6 mins

October 11, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Hostages The men who may finally be freed after two years

After more than 700 days in captivity, the 20 hostages believed to be alive in Gaza are set to be freed in the coming days.

time to read

7 mins

October 11, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Moody Blues bass player John Lodge dies aged 82

John Lodge, the singer and bass guitarist with the Moody Blues, has died at the age of 82.

time to read

1 min

October 11, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Palestinians in long walk to uncertainty as ceasefire starts

Tens of thousands of displaced Palestinians in Gaza began to return to the ruins of their homes yesterday after the ceasefire rapidly negotiated in recent days between Hamas and

time to read

3 mins

October 11, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Nobel peace prize White House says Trump should have won

The White House has denounced the Norwegian Nobel committee’s decision to award the Nobel peace prize to someone other than Donald Trump.

time to read

1 mins

October 11, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Robbie gets intimate with a late-night masterclass

What do you do if you're a superstar who has pulled well over a million people to a stadium tour?

time to read

1 mins

October 11, 2025

The Guardian

The Guardian

Venezuelan conservative opposition leader awarded Nobel peace prize

The Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado was awarded the Nobel peace prize yesterday for her dogged struggle to rescue the South American country from its fate as \"a brutal, authoritarian state\".

time to read

4 mins

October 11, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size