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Tate Modern Exhibition

Robert Morris: Bodyspacemotionthings

22 May – 14 June 2009
Robert Morris Untitled (Mirrored Cubes) 1965/1971

Robert Morris Untitled (Mirrored Cubes) 1965/1971 Mirror plate, glass and wood 91.4 x 91.4 x 91.4 cm

Courtesy the artist and Spruth Magers Berlin London. Tate © Robert Morris/ ARS, NY and DACS, London 2010

30274947001

Long Weekend 09: Robert Morris

Climb, balance, crawl and roll on the interactive installation Bodymotionspacesthings by artist Robert Morris, as this series of huge props including beams, weights, platforms, rollers, tunnels and ramps built from materials such as plywood, stone, steel plate, and rope transforms the Turbine Hall.

This is a re-creation of Tate Gallery’s first fully interactive exhibition which took place in 1971, inspiring a huge media and public interest, when an art gallery asked people for the first time to physically interact with an art work. Shockingly, it was closed just four days after opening, due to the unexpected and over enthusiastic response of the audience. This time around, it will be created using contemporary materials based upon the original plans, in collaboration with Morris, enabling you to experience an exciting landmark in Tate's history.

Bodymotionspacesthings was installed at Tate Modern as part of UBS Openings: The Long Weekend 2009. Following the success of this, opening has been extended to 14 June 2009.

Robert Morris (Born in Kansas City in 1931. Lives and works in New York State.) Morris was collaboratively involved with the Judson Dance Theater in the early 1960s, choreographing a number of important works. This experience was influential in his development as a pioneer of minimalist sculpture and process art, as he explored the viewer's perception and experience of object and space. He has since continued a prolific practice as artist and writer, producing performance, painting, drawing, installation and sculpture. He is the author of a series of seminal critical essays, including Notes on Sculpture (1966), often exploring ideas addressed in his artworks. Major exhibitions of his work include his installation at the Green Gallery, New York (1965), as well as solo shows at the Whitney Museum (1970), the Tate Gallery (1971) and the Guggenheim, New York (The Mind/Body Problem 1994). Recently, his work has been exhibited at Leo Castelli, New York (Robert Morris: Deflationary Objects, 1962–1976 2008), Sprüth Magers Lee, London (Robert Morris: Early Sculpture 2005 and Morning Star Evening Star 2008).

Tate Modern

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
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Dates

22 May – 14 June 2009

Find out more

  • Robert Morris Passageway 1961

    Simon Grant interviews Robert Morris

    Robert Morris and Simon Grant1

    Robert Morris (born 1931) has been variously involved in the development of Land art, performance, installation as well as being a prominent theorist on Minimalism. His classic grey modular plywood structures of the 1960s as well as the felt pieces have often been regarded as monuments of restraint, but as he discusses, there was a much more biographical element to these works, and others, than contemporary critics have suggested

  • Artist

    Robert Morris

    1931 – 2018
Artwork
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