Turner Contemporary
Turner Contemporary is one of the UK's contemporary art galleries. Celebrating Margate’s connection with the painter J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), an artist who believed that art could be an agent of change, its year-round exhibition programme offers free access to creative and cultural experiences.
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Established | 16 April 2011 |
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Location | Margate, Kent, England |
Coordinates | 51.389°N 1.380°E |
Type | Art gallery |
Collection size | British and international art from 1750 to the present |
Visitors | 3.6 million (2022) |
Director | Clarrie Wallis |
Public transit access | Margate railway station |
Website | Official website |
The building, designed by Sir David Chipperfield, is recognised as an important cultural icon. The ground floor accommodates a reception area, shop, event space and cafe while the main exhibition spaces are on the first floor, benefitting from natural north light and panoramic views of the North Sea.
Working with Kent County Council, a committed partner in a long-term strategy, the gallery has established a locally embedded, national gallery connecting art, people, and place. Its pioneering Learning programme works with thousands of children, young people, and adults every year. The gallery is committed to ensuring that its work is relevant and representative of diverse audiences, particularly those in its immediate vicinity. Philosophical enquiry, child-led leadership and co-curation underpin Turner Contemporary's approach. Prior to the pandemic the gallery attracted c.400,000 visitors a year, making it one of Kent’s top visitor attractions.
Turner Contemporary is widely recognised as an essential catalyst for the regeneration of East Kent[1][2] and has a strong track record of driving positive impact through the arts. Margate has fast become one of the most exciting creative hubs in the UK with a growing arts scene. Though this rise echoes few other seaside towns, the economy within Thanet is fragile.
Positioning itself as a cultural anchor, the gallery fosters relationships and builds networks between artists, art professionals, and organisations looking to increase co-production opportunities and champion a more creative connected community.
Victoria Pomery OBE was appointed Founding Director in 2002. She left her post in September 2021 to join The Box, Plymouth, after 19 years in post and through the gallery's first 10 years of operation. In January 2022, Clarrie Wallis took over as Director of Turner Contemporary. Wallis was previously Tate’s Senior Curator of Contemporary Art since 2016 and a curator at Tate since 1999.
Since opening in 2011, Turner Contemporary has welcomed over 3.6 million visitors and presented over 100 exhibitions involving 2,000 artists. Its exhibition and learning programme stimulate meaningful discussion about culture and society. The gallery supports artists at different stages in their careers. Exhibitions range from first solo shows by artists such as Michael Armitage and Larry Achiampong that develop artistic talent, to survey exhibitions of internationally renowned figures including Tracey Emin, Akram Zaatari and Steve McQueen.
History
Architectural Design
The building was designed by David Chipperfield,[3] whose design for the 3 storey, 20 metres (66 ft) high[4] gallery opened on 16 April 2011,[5] 14,000 people visited in the first weekend[6] and 500,000 in its first year.[7] In August 2013 the gallery received its millionth visitor.[8]
Turner Contemporary is located on a prominent seafront, where a guesthouse frequented by J.M.W. Turner once stood. The two-storey building is designed to maximise both the dramatic setting between sea and land and the extraordinary light conditions unique to the area that inspired Turner. It is composed of six identical crystalline volumes with mono-pitched roofs providing north light to the gallery spaces and revealing daily and seasonal light changes. Direct daylight enters the building from the clerestory windows on the north side and diffused sunlight from the skylights above each of the six volumes.
As the seafront is occasionally flooded, the building has been raised on a plinth and its immediate surroundings provided with a hard landscape. The building is constructed with a concrete frame and acid-etched glass skin. The envelope must withstand the corrosive nature of the sea, high humidity levels, strong winds and the occasional wave overtopping the building. The façades are primarily of glass with reinforced windows. Internally, the material palette is reduced to hard-wearing screed floors and dry lining to facilitate the hanging of changing exhibitions.
On 20 February 2020, Turner Contemporary became the first contemporary building to feature on a Bank of England note.[9] The £20 note features an image of artist J.M.W. Turner, alongside Turner Contemporary and the Margate lighthouse.
Turner Contemporary is the largest dedicated visual arts venue in Kent.[10] It is a registered charity under English law.[11]
Links to J. M. W. Turner
Built on the site of the former guesthouse where the gallery's namesake J. M. W. Turner visited, the skies that inspired much of his work are visible from Turner Contemporary's windows. These views, which featured in many of his paintings, led him to state, to art critic John Ruskin, that “the skies over Thanet are the loveliest in all Europe”.
Turner loved Margate; more than 100 of his works were inspired by the East Kent coast. He first visited the seaside town aged 11 when his parents sent him to school there. After returning to sketch the town aged 21, he became a regular visitor. He would often travel from London to Margate on a steamboat, prior to the development of the railway. It was the unique quality of light in this part of Kent that drew Turner back. His relationship with his landlady, Mrs Booth, who owned a guesthouse where the gallery now stands, was also clearly special to him – he began calling himself ‘Mr Booth’ after the death of her husband.
Turner Contemporary has no permanent collection of its own, and only one permanent artwork - Michael Craig Martin’s Turning Pages 2011, which has been positioned in the ground-floor Sunley Gallery since Turner Contemporary opened. The neon work is a recreation of Craig-Martin's first ever public commission for Margate Library in 1975 and was installed in the Sunley Gallery for Turner Contemporary's opening in 2011.
Recognition
In November 2011, the venue received an award from the British Guild of Travel Writers, for an outstanding tourism project. Queen Elizabeth II visited Turner Contemporary on 11 November 2011, as part of a wider trip to Margate.[12]
Gallery
- Close up of the roof
- Turner Contemporary
- Turner Contemporary
- Construction April 2010 from the north
- Construction April 2010 from the harbour
- Under construction in 2009
References
- "Turner Contemporary". Art Rabbit. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
- Worthington, Caroline (July–August 2011). "Reviews — Turner Contemporary, Margate". Museums Journal. 111 (7/8): 46–49.
- "New architect chosen for gallery". BBC.co.uk. 27 July 2006. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
- "Chipperfield unveils Turner Contemporary design for Margate". Building Design. 19 June 2007. Retrieved 31 August 2009.
- "Rendezvous: 'this plan needs a rethink'". Your Thanet News. 7 January 2009. Retrieved 26 August 2009.
- "Margate's Turner gallery has 45,500 visitors". BBC News. BBC. 26 April 2011. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
A total of 14,000 people visited on the opening weekend
- Beached and hard to reach
- "Turner Contemporary greets millionth visitor". BBC News. BBC. 29 August 2013. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
- "New £20 note featuring JMW Turner revealed by the Bank of England". the Guardian. 10 October 2019. Retrieved 25 May 2022.
- "Victoria Pomery". Ebbsfleet Landmark. Archived from the original on 19 October 2009. Retrieved 5 January 2017.
- "TURNER CONTEMPORARY, registered charity no. 1129974". Charity Commission for England and Wales.
- Hutchinson, Amanda (11 November 2011). "Royal Visit to Margate's Turner Contemporary". South East Tour Guides. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 1 September 2015.