Skip navigation

Main menu

  • What's on
  • Art & Artists
    • The Collection
      Artists
      Artworks
      Art by theme
      Media
      Videos
      Podcasts
      Short articles
      Learning
      Schools
      Art Terms
      Tate Research
      Art Making
      Create like an artist
      Kids art activities
      Tate Draw game
  • Visit
  • Shop
Become a Member
  • DISCOVER ART
  • ARTISTS A-Z
  • ARTWORK SEARCH
  • ART BY THEME
  • VIDEOS
  • ART TERMS
  • SCHOOLS
  • TATE KIDS
  • RESEARCH
  • Tate Britain
    Tate Britain Free admission
  • Tate Modern
    Tate Modern Free admission
  • Tate Liverpool + RIBA North
    Tate Liverpool + RIBA North Free admission
  • Tate St Ives
    Tate St Ives Ticket or membership card required
  • FAMILIES
  • ACCESSIBILITY
  • SCHOOLS
  • PRIVATE TOURS
Tate Logo
Become a Member
Tate Modern courses

You are here: Materiality, Movement and Mapping

27 June – 18 July 2016

Robert Morris, Untitled 1965, reconstructed 1971. Tate. © ARS, NY and DACS, London 2025.

Respond to and make your own art over four weeks

​How do we capture the live experience? How can this experience be recorded, controlled or even disrupted?

Exploring and investigating creative ways to respond to works from the Tate collection you have the opportunity to research and create your own artworks individually and collectively using a range of material processes and conceptual approaches which map experience.

This practical and ideas driven course takes place in and around the newly opened Tate Modern spaces with exclusive, after hours access to art works which focus primarily on participatory (or interactive) installation, live art and conceptual engagement. These works become a platform to discuss the experiential in art – the experience one receives from the work – and to explore the ways in which artists’ document or control, through material means, the live experience.

Week One – Recording the Experiential

Beginning with a tour of the new Tate Modern we become familiar with the works and artists featured. We will have time for discussion followed by a structured exercise to create your first practical responses to the experiences and ideas initiated or provoked by the exhibits.

Week Two – Mapping and Movement

Using examples from Tate’s collection and with reference to such groups as Fluxus, Art and Language and the Situationist Internationale and artists such as Tino Sehgal, you will develop your own set of written and or visual instructions, such as a map, through which to interpret the art works within the gallery spaces. 

Week Three – Material interventions

Taking inspiration from Duchamp and his ground breaking gallery interventions such as Sixteen Miles of String, you will create interventions to reframe or re-contextualise the exhibits. You will work with and develop a range of mark making and construction approaches to map movement and create material responses, using physical marks to record movement or creating props to act as intermediaries for experiencing or responding to the exhibits. 

Week Four – Experiential revisited 

Finish making your material intervention, map, instructions or disruptions and invite your fellow participants to revisit and re-experience the art works within Tate Modern through the intermediary of the work you have created.

This course is suitable for all levels and would suit those who are keen to experiment and explore their creativity, make exciting new artworks and meet new people, within in a gallery context. Some materials will be provided.

The course is led by artist Sarah Sparkes who works with installation, public engagement, performance and film and painting within in her own practice.

This event has been provided by Tate Gallery on behalf of Tate Enterprises LTD

Tate Modern

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
Plan your visit

Dates

27 June – 18 July 2016

Artwork
Close

Join in

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Sign up to emails

Sign up to emails

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Tate’s privacy policy

About

  • About us
  • Our collection
  • Terms and copyright
  • Governance
  • Picture library
  • ARTIST ROOMS
  • Tate Kids

Support

  • Tate Collective
  • Members
  • Patrons
  • Donate
  • Corporate
  • My account
  • Press
  • Jobs
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Contact
© The Board of Trustees of the Tate Gallery, 2025
All rights reserved