Ana Mendieta 15 July 2026 - 17 January 2027

©The Estate of Ana Mendieta Collection, LLC. Licensed by Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York / DACS, 2026 / Courtesy Marian Goodman Gallery and Alison Jacques, London.

This summer, Tate Modern will stage the UK’s first major exhibition dedicated to multidisciplinary artist Ana Mendieta (1948-1985) in over a decade. Active in the 1970s and 1980s, Mendieta’s ground-breaking practice challenged traditional notions of sculpture, photography and film. Using her own terms to describe her art, she is best known for her ‘earth-body’ works, outlining her body in the landscape with natural elements such as earth, fire and flowers. Featuring over 150 works, the exhibition will be arranged thematically through symbolic locations, highlighting key moments in the artist’s career and demonstrating her persistent engagement with the natural world. Her iconic Silueta Series 1973-80 will be presented alongside newly remastered films, rarely seen paintings and drawings, late sculptures and restaged installations, shedding new light on her practice and demonstrating its lasting power for new audiences.

Mendieta’s search for origin and desire to connect with nature was driven by her experience of displacement. Born in Havana, Cuba, she was exiled to the United States with her sister after the revolution, separated from her parents, brother and homeland at only 12 years old. A student of archaeology and art at the University of Iowa, she created various works that re-establish and renew her connections to her country. Her film Ochún 1981 presents a sand-sculpted figure on the shore of Key Biscayne, Florida channelling waters between the US and Cuba. Returning to her homeland throughout the 1980s, she created her Esculturas Rupestres (Rupestrian Sculptures) 1981, figures inspired by her evolving Silueta Series and shapes she had encountered at Neolithic sites carved directly into limestone rock, with titles drawn from Afro-Cuban traditions and indigenous Taíno culture. ‘My work is basically in the tradition of a Neolithic art’, Mendieta said in 1984, ‘I’m not interested in the formal qualities of my materials, but their emotional and sensual ones.’ These works illustrate the artist’s desire to create powerful and enduring images connected to history and her experience of the world.

Mendieta started her Silueta Series during a trip to Mexico in 1973, where she was inspired to create life-size ephemeral works exploring notions of existence, resurgence and renewal. She burnt, carved and moulded Siluetas into landscapes in regions across the Americas and Europe, often returning to sites meaningful to her or connected to ancient histories. Stating, ‘To me, the work has existed in different levels. It’s existed in the level of being in nature…and eventually being eroded away’, these imprints and outlines of the body were left to return to the earth, challenging the idea of art as a fixed object. Documented using photographs and films, visitors will be able to experience this innovative series throughout the exhibition, from the first Silueta where white flowers are strewn over Mendieta’s body, to traces of the female form imprinted into riverbanks and shores.

Central to the exhibition is a celebration of Mendieta’s connections across social, political and geographical boundaries. Developing her artistic practice on the cutting-edge Intermedia programme at the University of Iowa between 1972-1977, she embedded herself within an experimental artistic community early on. Moving to New York in 1978, she became deeply engaged with the city’s art and activist movements and became a member of A.I.R Gallery, the first not-for-profit, artist-directed gallery for women artists in the US. Foregrounding her interest in education, the show will also explore her role as a teacher in Iowa in the 1970s through early videos made in collaboration with her students, such as Parachute 1973.

Premiering in the UK, a series of newly remastered films made between 1971 and 1981 will illustrate Mendieta’s innovative approach to the medium, which included scratching or painting directly onto the celluloid. She also captured various bodies of work in film, enabling visitors to experience her iconic Anima, Silueta de Cohetes (Firework Piece) 1976 and Bird Run 1974, depicting the artist covered in feathers running across an empty beach. Mendieta’s longstanding interest in transformation will be further explored through the photographic series Untitled (Facial Cosmetic Variations) 1972, in which she distorts her appearance with cosmetics, wigs and various facial expressions.

In 1983, Mendieta was awarded the Prix de Rome fellowship at the American Academy in Italy. After a decade of predominantly making work in nature, in Rome, her practice shifted towards studio-based sculpture, allowing her to create more durable works. Tate Modern will present several of her floor-based works made with earth and binder, including Nile Born 1984, and her multi-part sculpture made of tree trunks, La Jungla (Totem Grove) 1985, in which she used gunpowder to burn dark silhouettes onto the surfaces. Joined by the artist's delicate drawings on leaves and paintings from the ‘Amategram’ series, depicting totemic forms on bark paper, these works illustrate Mendieta’s continued exploration of the female form.

Offering a chance for visitors to engage directly with the living and impermanent aspects of Mendieta’s practice, several of her ephemeral sculptures will be restaged for the exhibition. Ñañigo Burial 1976, a Silueta made from black ritual candles, will be lit regularly during the run of the show. Also featured will be a recreation of the first earth-body work that Mendieta made for an indoor gallery setting. Assembled from branches, leaves, soil, moss and stones, this room will bring a forest-like environment into the exhibition space. Expanding beyond the gallery walls, one of the artist’s tree sculptures – first made in 1982 – will be brought to life outside Tate Modern, capturing the transformation and resilience that Mendieta’s artistic vision offers.

Ana Mendieta is supported by Tate International Council, Tate Patrons and Tate Members. Research is supported by Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational in partnership with Hyundai Motor. The exhibition is organised in collaboration with the Estate of Ana Mendieta. It is curated by Michael Wellen, Senior Curator, International Art, Tate Modern; Valentine Umansky, Curator, International Art, Tate Modern; and Elsa Collinson, Assistant Curator, International Art, Tate Modern.

Tate Members get unlimited free entry to all Tate exhibitions. Become a Member at tate.org.uk/members. Everyone aged 16-25 can visit all Tate exhibitions for £5 by joining Tate Collective. To join for free, visit tate.org.uk/tate-collective.

For press requests, email hele.rhys@tate.org.uk and perry.stewart@tate.org.uk or call +44(0)20 7887 8730. To download press images, visit Tate’s Dropbox.

Listings Information

Ana Mendieta
15 July 2026 – 17 January 2027
Tate Modern, Bankside, London SE1 9TG
Open daily 10.00–18.00, and until 21:00 every Friday and Saturday
Tickets available at tate.org.uk and +44(0)20 7887 8888
Free for Members. Join at tate.org.uk/members
Follow @Tate #AnaMendieta

About Ana Mendieta

Ana Mendieta (1948-1985) was a multidisciplinary artist who primarily used elements from nature such as earth, water, fire and flora. Her work has been exhibited widely in museums across the world, including MUSAC, León, Spain (2024); SESC Pompéia, São Paulo, Brazil (2023); Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane, Australia (2019); Middleheim Museum, Antwerp, Belgium (2019); Institute for Contemporary Art, Galerie nationale du Jeu de Paume, Paris, France (2018); Martin-Gropius-Bau, Berlin, Germany (2018); The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel (2014); Hayward Gallery, Southbank Centre, London, United Kingdom (2013); Castello di Rivoli, Turin, Italy (2013); Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois (2011); Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2004); Helsinki City Art Museum, Helsinki, Finland (1996) ); and New Museum, New York (1987). The artist received many prestigious awards in her lifetime, including a National Endowment for the Arts Grant (1977 and 1980) and Fellowship (1982); Creative Arts Program Services Grant, New York Foundation for the Arts (1979); John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship (1980); New York State Council on the Arts Grant (1982); the Prix de Rome, American Academy in Rome (1983); and the Award in the Visual Arts, Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA), Winston-Salem, North Carolina (1984). A Visual Arts Lifetime Achievement Award was posthumously bestowed by The Cintas Foundation, New York in 2009.

About Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational

Over the past two decades, Tate’s collections, displays, and programmes have expanded beyond Europe and North America to be more open, inclusive, and reflective of its audiences. Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational marks a next step on this journey by placing the exchange of ideas between art and artists from around the world at Tate’s core. The Centre’s ongoing exploration of transnational dialogues in contemporary art has been instrumental in deepening the narratives of this exhibition and our understanding of Ana Mendieta’s practice, particularly through the contextualisation of her outdoor and ephemeral works within a global framework. An event hosted by the Centre in September, developed by the exhibition curators together with Marleen Boschen, Adjunct Curator of Art and Ecology and Alvin Li, Curator, International Art, will further explore ecological questions around outdoor practices. Hyundai Motor’s support for the Centre began in January 2019, alongside their support of Tate Modern’s annual Hyundai Commission.

About Hyundai Motor’s Art Projects

For over a decade, Hyundai Motor Company has deepened its partnerships with museums and cultural organizations worldwide, including Tate, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Korean Pavilion at the Venice Biennale. Hyundai Translocal Series is a new partnership initiative that roots itself in fostering dialogues and collaborations among art institutions in Korea and across the globe. Hyundai Motor’s own art initiatives include open-call programs such as the VH AWARD, the Hyundai Blue Prize+, and Artlab Editorial, a digital platform dedicated to art writing by transnational voices. These ongoing collaborations embrace the complexities of the cultural landscape by exploring new ideas and perspectives within and beyond the art ecosystem. For further information, visit artlab.hyundai.com or follow @hyundai.artlab #HyundaiArtlab.

Related Publications

Ana Mendieta
Edited by Valentine Umansky and Mike Wellen
Hardback £45; Paperback £32
Published to accompany Tate Modern’s exhibition, this book will showcase Ana Mendieta as a transnational artist, incorporating the voices of international writers, artists and poets, including those who knew the artist directly.

Related Events

Tate Modern Late
25 September 2026, 18.00-22.00
Tate Modern will open after-hours to celebrate Ana Mendieta’s groundbreaking practice. The evening will feature music, workshops, talks and performances centred around nature and the body.

Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational Public Event - Site Unbound
11-12 September 2026
This event will be a hands-on workshop exploring outdoor art practices, from Richard Long’s walking to Ana Mendieta’s blending of art and nature. It will feature collaborations with artists like David Hammons, and Zheng Bo, alongside London partners including Phytology and Goldsmiths College.

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