![]() The autumn will see a career-spanning exhibition devoted to Sarah Lucas, an artist internationally celebrated for her bold and irreverent approach to British experiences of class, sex and gender. It will reveal the scope of Julien’s pioneering work from the early 1980s through to his recent large-scale, multi-screen installations, which investigate the movement of peoples across different continents, times and spaces. In April it will be joined by an ambitious solo exhibition of work by Isaac Julien, one of the most important contemporary artists and filmmakers working today. This will be the largest exhibition of Dante Gabriel Rossetti’s paintings in two decades and the first time all the surviving paintings and major works on paper by his wife Elizabeth (née Siddall) will be seen in public. It will show how siblings Christina and Dante Gabriel Rossetti forged a counter-cultural circle in 19th Britain, inspired by new ideas about life, love, sex, society and art. Tate Britain’s first exhibition of the year will focus on The Rossettis. ![]() Tate Members will be able to visit all these exhibitions for free and 16-25-year-olds can get £5 tickets by joining Tate Collective. Group exhibitions will explore the relationships between painting and photography, art and activism, and the past and the future, while major solo shows will be dedicated to Philip Guston, Isaac Julien and Sarah Lucas. Two ground-breaking figures in modern art, Hilma af Klint and Piet Mondrian, will be shown together at Tate Modern, while the radical Rossetti generation will be presented in a new light at Tate Britain. Tate today announces its programme of exhibitions for 2023.
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