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Tate reveals 2026 exhibition highlights.

Tracey Emin,My Bed1998Tate. Lent by The Duerckheim Collection 2015, On long term loan© Tracey Emin. All rights reserved, DACS/Artimage
Tracey Emin, My Bed 1998 Tate. Lent by The Duerckheim Collection 2015, On long term loan © Tracey Emin. All rights reserved, DACS/Artimage

Tate today announced its programme of exhibitions for 2026 across Tate Modern, Tate Britain and Tate St Ives.

Highlights include a survey of Tracey Emin’s astonishing career, an exploration of Frida Kahlo as an unparalleled cultural phenomenon, the biggest European retrospective of James McNeill Whistler in 30 years, and a dive into the raucous and rebellious decade that was the 90s. In addition, Tate will show works by Ana Mendieta that have never been seen in the UK, relocate Duncan Grant’s studio from his Sussex home to Tate Britain, and at Tate St Ives stage the first major exhibition of Wilhelmina Barns-Graham’s eight-decade career. 

Ana Mendieta, Imágen de Yágul, Mexico 1973 © The Estate of Ana Mendieta Collection, LLC. Licensed by DACS

Maria Balshaw, Director of Tate, said

“2026 will be a particularly exciting year for Tate.?From three extraordinary women artists spanning the year at Tate Modern to the glorious immersive work of Julio Le Parc, and from the celebration of leading figures of modern British art like Duncan Grant, Vanessa Bell, and Wilhemina Barns-Graham to new commissions and contemporary artists, the?programme reflects our commitment offering our visitors once-in-a-lifetime opportunities to see great art brought together in Tate’s galleries.” 

Tate Modern 

Tate Modern starts the year with a landmark exhibition?tracing 40 years of Tracey Emin’s groundbreaking practice, showcasing career-defining works alongside material never exhibited before. The exhibition will celebrate Emin’s raw and confessional approach in all her forms of art making as she poses profound questions on love, trauma, and autobiography. 

Julio Le Parc, Blue Sphere 2013 Tate. Lent by the Tate Americas Foundation, courtesy of the Latin American Acquisitions Committee 2023 © ADAGP, Paris and DACS, London 2025. Photo: Museum of Art Pudong

The summer will see the opening of three exhilarating shows. The first will be an exhibition celebrating the visionary immersive works of Julio Le Parc, featuring his interactive installations and striking sculptures, grounded in his large-scale op art paintings. This will be followed by an in-depth exploration of how Frida Kahlo became one of the most influential artists of modern times, as well as a cultural phenomenon and internationally recognised icon. The exhibition will stage Kahlo’s best-known paintings, as well as photographs and memorabilia from her archives, in dialogue with artists she inspired from future generations. The season will end with a major exhibition dedicated to Ana Mendieta. The show will explore profound questions about displacement, identity, and relationships to nature, bringing together many of Mendieta’s iconic film and photographic works alongside installations which have never been seen in the UK before. 

Long Chin-San, Riverside Spring 1942The Royal Photographic Society Collection at the V&A, acquired with the generous assistance of the National Lottery Heritage Fund and Art Fund © Courtesy the Estate of the Artist

In the autumn, a group exhibition Light and Magic: The Birth of Art Photography will examine the international movement which first transformed the camera into an artistic tool. It will show how photographers from Shanghai to Sydney, New York to Cape Town, and Brazil to Singapore created beautiful and atmospheric images between the 1880s and 1960s, using experimental techniques to reimagine photography as an art form. 

Each season will also be marked by one of Tate Modern’s three annual commissions: the cutting-edge?Infinities Commission in the Tanks, the participatory summer commission for UNIQLO Tate Play,?and the world-renowned Hyundai Commission?in the Turbine Hall in the autumn. 

Tate Britain 

Hurvin Anderson, Hawksbill Bay 2020 Tate. Lent by Tate Americas Foundation, courtesy of Mala Gaonkar 2023 © Hurvin Anderson. All Rights Reserved, DACS 2025

In the spring, Tate Britain will open Hurvin Anderson’s first major museum show, bringing together more than 60 of his vibrant paintings spanning the artist’s entire career to date.?In colour-drenched landscapes and interiors, Anderson’s work meanders back and forth between the UK and the Caribbean, reflecting his own experiences of belonging and diaspora.?This will be joined by a retrospective of the work of James McNeill Whistler, the first to be held in Europe in 30 years. It will bring together the artist’s world-famous paintings alongside rarely and never seen works, including exquisite portraits, drawings, prints and designs, from as early as his teens in St. Petersburg to his enigmatic late self-portraits.  

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

Two major shows will open in the autumn, starting with a thrilling journey through a seminal decade in which a groundswell of creativity changed the face of British culture.?Guest curated by Edward Enninful OBE, The 90s will bring together iconic images by photographers including Juergen Teller and Corrine Day, alongside the work of artists like Damien Hirst, Gillian Wearing and Yinka Shonibare, and fashion items by decade-defining designers including Vivienne Westwood, Alexander McQueen and Hussein Chalayan.?This will be followed by an exploration of the remarkable 50-year relationship and creative partnership between two celebrated modern British artists. Vanessa Bell & Duncan Grant will feature over 250 works, including vivid portraits, still lives, landscapes, decorative works on furniture, ceramics, and a once-in-a-lifetime restaging of Duncan Grant’s studio, specially relocated from his Sussex home, Charleston. 

Portrait of Zineb Sedira Photo by Adrain Flower

In the Duveen Galleries at the heart of the building, Zineb Sedira will be the next artist to undertake the Tate Britain commission. Sedira is a London-based Franco-Algerian artist who has worked across film, photography and installation to explore interwoven stories of the personal, the social and the geographical. There will also be new exhibitions of contemporary art throughout the year as part of Art Now, Tate Britain’s ongoing series of free shows dedicated to emerging artistic talent. 

Tate St Ives 

Aleksandra Kasuba, Shell Dweller IV 1989 © Lithuanian National Museum of Art

In May, Tate St Ives’ will present the work of visionary Lithuanian American artist, Aleksandra Kasuba. The show will span six decades of work, exploring Kasuba’s artistic journey from her early paintings and mosaics to her later sculptures and architectural designs. Her love of the natural world is palpable throughout her art, which was often inspired by the shapes and forms of nature. 

Wilhelmina Barns-Graham, Glacier Crystal, Grindelwald 1950Tate. Presented by the Contemporary Art Society 1964© Wilhelmina Barns-Graham Trust
Wilhelmina Barns-Graham, Glacier Crystal, Grindelwald 1950 Tate. Presented by the Contemporary Art Society 1964 © Wilhelmina Barns-Graham Trust

In the autumn, a survey of one of Britain’s most significant 20th century artists,?Wilhelmina Barns-Graham, will open at Tate St Ives. Featuring over 170 paintings, drawings, prints and archive materials, the exhibition will trace Barns-Graham’s development from her student days at the Edinburgh College of Art and early years in St Ives, where she found her place in?a lively community of painters and sculptors, through to her later years working between Cornwall and Scotland.? 

Exhibition listings 

Tracey Emin (26 Feb – 31 Aug 2026, Tate Modern) 

Presented in the Eyal Ofer Galleries. In partnership with Gucci. Also supported by Tate Members. 

Hurvin Anderson (26 Mar – 23 Aug 2026, Tate Britain) 

Supported by the Huo Family Foundation. With additional support from the Hurvin Anderson Exhibition Supporters Circle and Tate Patrons 

Aleksandra Kasuba (2 May 2026 – 4 Oct 2027 Tate St Ives) 

Supported by Tate Members. This exhibition is organised by Tate St Ives in collaboration with the Lithuanian National Museum of Art 

Tate Britain Commission: Zineb Sedira (12 May 2026 – 17 Jan 2027, Tate Britain) 

James McNeill Whistler (21 May 2026 – 27 Sep 2026, Tate Britain) 

Supported by Tate Members 

Julio Le Parc (11 Jun 2026 – 3 May 2027, Tate Modern) 

Presented in The George Economou Gallery. Supported by Tate Members 

The Infinities Commission (opening June 2026, Tate Modern) 

Made possible through philanthropic support to Tate 

Frida: The Making of an Icon (25 Jun 2026 – 4 Jan 2027, Tate Modern) 

Organised by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, in collaboration with Tate Modern. The exhibition is in partnership with?Lead Global Supporter, Bank of America. Supported by John J. Studzinski CBE with additional support from Tate Members 

Ana Mendieta (9 Jul 2026 – 10 Jan 2027, Tate Modern) 

Supported by Tate Members. Organised by Tate Modern in collaboration with the Estate of Ana Mendieta 

The 90s (1 Oct 2026 – 14 Feb 2027, Tate Britain) 

Supported by Tate Members 

Light and Magic: The Birth of Art Photography (8 Oct 2026 – 14 Feb 2027, Tate Modern) 

Presented in the Eyal Ofer Galleries 

Hyundai Commission (opening Oct 2026, Tate Modern) 

In partnership with Hyundai Motor 

Wilhelmina Barns-Graham (24 Oct 2026 – 11 April 2027 Tate St Ives) 

Supported by Tate Members 

Vanessa Bell & Duncan Grant?(12 Nov 2026 – 11 Apr 2027, Tate Britain) 

Supported by Tate Members. This exhibition is organised by Tate Britain in collaboration with Charleston 

UNIQLO Tate Play (throughout the year, Tate Modern) 

In partnership with UNIQLO 

Art Now (throughout the year, Tate Britain) 

Supported by The Bukhman Foundation. With additional support from the Art Now Supporters Circle and Tate Americas Foundation 

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