The Tate Modern is a breathtaking gallery devoted to modern
art. It’ is situated at Bankside London.
Many Britains view high culture with a fair deal of
misgiving. Yet, this brilliant gallery designed to celebrate modern art
constitutes a natural attraction for the punters and locals, as well as the
tourists. It has been ranked among London's most-visited attractions.
Part of its appeal is the building itself, fashioned by
architects Herzog and De Meuron from a vast disused power station on the Thames's
south bank. In addition to blockbuster exhibits and live events, the gallery
invites a prominent artist every year, to transform its cavernous turbine hall:
Chinese artist and dissident Ai Wei Wei blanketed the space with 100 million
hand-sculpted and painted porcelain sunflower seeds in 2010; British artist
Tacita Dean paid homage to 35mm filmmaking in 2011, with her 11-minute loop of
grainy, flickering images projected onto a towering screen at the rear of the
hall.
It would be easy to spend the entire day in the gallery, but
you might want to get out and walk around the neighborhood: Enter foodie heaven
in nearby Borough Market, where the delis and restaurants are open all week and
a farmer's market operates Friday and Saturday. Directly across the river from
the Tate is St Paul’s Cathedral, Sir Christopher Wren's most celebrated
building. To get there, you cross the £18.2 million Millennium Bridge, a
suspension footbridge completed in 2000, which quickly gained the sobriquet the
"Wobbly Bridge." (Though the wobble have since been fixed.)
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