Modernism and the Sublime
'Wrong from the Start'

Kasimir Malevich, Dynamic Suprematism, 1915 or 1916
Kasimir Malevich
Dynamic Suprematism 1915 or 1916
Tate
Monday 30 November 2009, 10.15–17.00

Wanting to move forward, many modernist thinkers in the first half of the twentieth century found Romantic art to be outdated. The Dadaists, Futurists and Vorticists all rejected the sublime outright, but the relationship between modernist and sublime art is not a simple opposition. The Abstract Expressionists took a more favourable view, and Mark Rothko even claimed kinship with JMW Turner. This symposium explores how artists have engaged with or rejected the Romantic notion of the sublime.

Visit the Sublime Object research pages for schedule updates.

In association with The Sublime Object: Nature, Art and Language research project at Tate Britain
 
Supported by the AHRC in collaboration with the Landscape and Environment programme.
 
Organised by Tate Britain and the University of Leicester

Tate Britain  Auditorium
£15 (£10 concessions), booking required
For tickets book online
or call 020 7887 8888.
Book tickets online

Access for wheelchairs and pushchairs  Hearing loop available  

Speakers: 

  • Christine Battersby (University of Warwick)
  • Scott Freer (University of Leicester)
  • Tim Martin (De Montfort University)
  • Gavin Parkinson (Courtauld Institute)
  • Ian Patterson (University of Cambridge)
  • Mark Rawlinson (University of Leicester)
  • Steven Vine (Swansea University)

Convenor: 

  • Philip Shaw (University of Leicester)