The 90s: Art and Fashion 8 October 2026 - 14 February 2027

Juergen Teller, Young Pink Kate, London 1998 © Juergen Teller, All Rights Reserved

In Autumn 2026, Tate Britain will stage the first exhibition to explore the art, photography and fashion of the 1990s, a decade synonymous with possibility, optimism and an audacious spirit. The 90s: Art and Fashion will explore this period’s surge of creative energy, shaped by its opportunities and challenges. Featuring nearly 70 artists, photographers and designers, from the Young British Artists (YBAs) to Alexander McQueen, the show will spotlight the emergence of this generation of exciting and diverse artistic talent that reshaped Britain’s cultural identity. Drawing on curator Edward Enninful OBE’s experience of the decade, The 90s will bring together over 100 photographs, paintings, sculptures and garments to re-evaluate one of the most transformative moments in British art.

Following the gritty economic uncertainty of the 1980s, the 1990s saw the emergence of a resourceful new generation of young talent in Britain. The exhibition will open by exploring their taste for imperfection and realness with a Do-It-Yourself attitude, presenting photography by Corinne Day, Nigel Shafran and Juergen Teller for influential publications including i-D and Dazed and Confused, who were at the forefront of defining a new ‘anti-fashion’ grunge style. The influence of print media will be explored in work by Roshini Kempadoo and Eileen Perrier which expanded mainstream beauty notions at a time when Kate Moss wearing Liza Bruce’s sheer slip dress captured tabloid interest. Real people became artists’ muses, as reflected in the work of Barbara Walker, Jenny Saville and Gillian Wearing, while the likes of Tracey Emin, Sam Taylor‑Johnson and Sarah Lucas captivated the public with their anarchic spirit and frank work tackling agency, identity and class.

The decade’s youthful attitude will be captured in film and photography engaged with nightlife and subculture; from Mark Leckey’s 1999 film Fiorucci Made Me Hardcore to images documenting young people at iconic club nights across the UK including the Haçienda in Manchester and Bagley’s in London. The birth of acid house is documented by Dave Swindells, Peter J Walsh and Tony Davis; Normski, Eddie Otchere and Ewen Spencer follow the rise of jungle, hip-hop and drum and bass scenes; and joyful queer club nights are captured by Poulomi Desai, Stuart Linden Rhodes and Jon Shard. Raves and free parties photographed by Seana Gavin and Vinca Peterson illustrate a hedonistic counterculture fuelled by flyers and payphones, whilst Boy Racers are documented in Elaine Constantine’s series, Burn up Northampton.

As the influence of ‘Cool Britannia’, grew, many artists used their work to draw attention to those largely excluded from this narrative. In the exhibition, Steve McQueen’s first major film Bear 1993, a cinematic portrayal of an intimate faceoff between two men, will be joined by Chris Ofili’s Turner Prize-winning painting No Woman, No Cry 1998, a poignant tribute to Doreen and Stephen Lawrence, and video by Keith Piper reflecting on sport and national identity. Suits by Ozwald Boateng, runway footage of Joe Casely-Hayford’s presentations, and fashion photography by Koto Bolofo will celebrate the work of Black British designers, with street style spotlighted through a collaboration between Jason Evans and Simon Foxton.

The exhibition will explore the decade’s conceptual movements, from opulent and macabre body horror to sleek and uncanny minimalism. Artists such as Hamad Butt responded to the ongoing impact of the AIDS crisis, and Helen Chadwick, Jake and Dinos Chapman and Cathy de Monchaux played with a gothic interest in decay and revulsion. Cerith Wyn Evans, Rachel Whiteread and Gary Hume experimented with parred back forms whilst Damien Hirst took this conceptual approach further, removing the artist’s hand altogether with fabricated formaldehyde filled sculptures, the antithesis to low-fi grunge. The exhibition will also explore the emergence of visionary designers who blurred the lines between art and fashion spectacularly, from Alexander McQueen’s provocative, dramatic and sometimes nightmarish presentations to Hussein Chalayan’s design-led clothing inspired by everyday objects. In photography, Nick Knight, David Sims and Craig McDean embraced starker, more conceptually driven imagery, whilst Wolfgang Tillmans reflected on the promise of past and future technology with Concorde Grid 1997, capturing the dual feelings of optimism and anxiety induced by the impending millennium.

The exhibition will end with artists and designers who, at the close of the 20th century, reckoned with Britain’s past and dealt with questions of its future. Yinka Shonibare and Maud Sulter drew from European art history and dandyism to ask questions of diversity and representation, whilst designers such as Vivienne Westwood and John Galliano borrowed across history and cultures, interrogating style, class and national mythology with anachronistic fashion collections. Together, this closing room reflects on the 90s as a moment poised between past and future, allowing audiences to rethink our picture of the art of the decade.

The 90s: Art and Fashion is supported by The 90s Exhibition Supporters Circle. With additional support from Tate International Council, Tate Patrons, Tate Members and Tate Americas Foundation. Curated by Edward Enninful, OBE with Jessica Vaughan, Curator, Contemporary British Art; Helen Little, Curator, Contemporary British Art; Dominique Heyse-Moore, Senior Curator, Contemporary British Art; Alex Farquharson, Director, Tate Britain; and Celeste McEvoy, Assistant Curator, Contemporary British Art, Tate Britain.

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Listings information
The 90s: Art and Fashion
8 October 2026 – 14 February 2027
Tate Britain, Millbank, London SW1P 4RG
Open daily 10.00–18.00
Tickets available at tate.org.uk and +44(0)20 7887 8888
Free for Members. Join at tate.org.uk/members
Follow @Tate #THE90S

List of artists
Abigail Lane, Alexander McQueen (with Sarah Harmarnee), Barbara Walker, Cathy de Monchaux, Cerith Wyn Evans, Chris Ofili, Corinne Day, Craig McDean, Damien Hirst, David Sims, David Swindells, Des Willie, Donald Rodney, Eddie Otchere, Eileen Perrier, Elaine Constantine, Ellen von Unwerth, Ewen Spencer, Fergus Greer, Gary Hume, Gillian Wearing, Glenn Luchford, Hamad Butt, Helen Chadwick, Hussein Chalayan, Jake and Dinos Chapman, Jason Evans (with stylist Simon Foxton), Jenny Saville, Joe Casely Hayford, John Galliano, Jon Shard, Juergen Teller, Koto Bolofo, Mark Leckey, Mark Mattock, Mark McNulty, Maud Sulter, Mischa Haller, Mona Hatoum, Nick Knight, Nigel Shafran, Normski (Norman Anderson), Ozwald Boateng, Peter J Walsh, Philip Treacy, Poulomi Desai, Rachel Whiteread, Roshini Kempadoo, Sam Taylor‑Johnson, Sarah Lucas, Sean Ellis (styled by Isabella Blow), Seana Gavin, Shaun Leane, Steve McQueen, Sonia Boyce, Sophy Rickett, Stella McCartney, Stephen Jones, Steven Meisel, Stuart Linden Rhodes, Tony Davis, Tracey Emin, Vinca Petersen, Vivienne Westwood, Wolfgang Tillmans and Yinka Shonibare.

About Edward Enninful
Regarded as one of the leading voices in the creative industry working today, Edward Enninful OBE, has helped bring widespread distinction to global fashion. Edward has a long-standing track record for delivering impactful storytelling and championing diverse and emerging talent within the industry. Born to a Ghanaian army officer and a seamstress, Edward became the youngest ever fashion editor of an international publication, i-D magazine, at 18. Quickly making his mark within the industry, by 1998 he became a contributing fixture at Italian Vogue, catapulting him into world recognition as a leading stylist and cultural contributor. Here, Edward spearheaded “The Black Issue” which featured only black women, and which started the necessary dialogue amongst a wider public audience that continues today. Edward continued to use his voice to make a positive impact in the industry with roles at American Vogue, W Magazine and most recently, British Vogue – becoming the first black person to serve as Editor-in-Chief in Vogue’s history and successfully transforming the publication into a diverse and inclusive multi-platform brand. In 2025, Enninful launched EE72, his new global media and entertainment company, where he serves as co-founder and Chief Creative Officer. EE72 develops and produces transformational content, immersive experiences and innovative products that challenge audiences to see the world through new eyes. Edward’s dedication to diversity in fashion was honoured with the presentation of an OBE.

Related publications
The 90s: Art and Fashion by Edward Enninful
Edited by Edward Enninful OBE and Dominique Heyse-Moore
Hardback £45; Paperback £32
240 pages

A decade when British culture exploded with confidence and contradiction, The 90s captures the creative intersection between art and fashion. Edited by former Vogue editor-in-chief, Edward Enninful, through iconic imagery and personal reflections as well as essays, the book traces how art, fashion, music and design dismantled hierarchies and reshaped Britain’s global cultural identity. Both vivid chronicle and critical reflection, it reveals why the spirit of the 1990s remains urgent today.

Featuring contributions from: Sonia Boyce, Sarah Burton, Hussein Chalayan, Christine Checinska, Jarvis Cocker, Matthew Collin, Alex Farquharson, Caryn Franklin, Jefferson Hack, Dominique Heyse-Moore, Afua Hirsch, Terry Jones, Tricia Jones, Helen Little, Sarah Lucas, Stella McCartney, Celeste McEvoy, Steve McQueen, Normski, Justine Picardie, Miranda Sawyer, Amanda Sharp, Yinka Shonibare, Matthew Slotover, Wolfgang Tillmans, Jessica Vaughan and Gillian Wearing.

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