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Tate Modern
Britain's national gallery of international modern art in a former power station, featuring works by Picasso, Warhol, and Hockney.
About
The world's most-visited modern art museum occupies a former power station, where the 99-meter chimney now signals cultural rather than electrical power. Since 2000, this industrial cathedral showcases how art challenges, provokes, and reflects our times—admission free, minds blown daily.
Turbine Hall & Collections
The five-story Turbine Hall hosts blockbuster installations: Olafur Eliasson's artificial sun drew 2 million sun-worshippers, while Ai Weiwei's 100 million hand-painted sunflower seeds questioned mass production and individuality. Annual commissions transform this vast space into London's most Instagrammed art experience.
Thematic hanging juxtaposes Picasso with contemporary African artists, Rothko with video installations. Collections span Cubism to Conceptual Art, with expanded focus on previously marginalized artists—Louise Bourgeois's spiders terrorize alongside Yayoi Kusama's infinity rooms.
Beyond the Galleries
The Blavatnik Building's 10th-floor viewing terrace offers free 360-degree city views. Underground oil tanks host performance art and film. Tate Exchange (Level 5) invites public participation in social art projects.
Friday and Saturday late openings feature DJs and bars. Family workshops run weekends, while free daily tours decode contemporary art's mysteries. The Turbine Hall entrance avoids queues; Members skip all lines and access special exhibitions free.