Tate Modern 2025: Exhibitions, Artists, and What’s New This Year

When you think of Tate Modern, London’s leading gallery for international modern and contemporary art, located on the south bank of the Thames. Also known as Tate Modern Gallery, it’s where global artists test boundaries and visitors find work that challenges, moves, or surprises them. In 2025, it’s not just another year of rotating shows—it’s a turning point. The gallery is doubling down on underrepresented voices, immersive installations, and work that responds directly to today’s social and political tensions. This isn’t art you pass by. It’s art you feel.

Tate Modern 2025 leans hard into contemporary art London, the city’s thriving scene of experimental studios, collectives, and digital creators pushing beyond traditional formats. You’ll see more video art, soundscapes, and AI-assisted pieces than ever before. The Turbine Hall’s annual commission isn’t just a sculpture—it’s a full-body experience, designed to make you walk through it, not just look at it. Meanwhile, the London art galleries, a network of public and private spaces that shape how art is seen and discussed in the capital are all watching what happens here. Tate Modern sets the tone. If something lands hard here, it echoes across the city—from Whitechapel to the Serpentine.

This year’s programming focuses on three big themes: climate urgency, digital identity, and forgotten histories. Artists from Nigeria, Brazil, and Southeast Asia are taking center stage, not as tokens, but as voices shaping the conversation. There’s a new wing opening in spring, dedicated to non-Western modernism—work that was once sidelined by Eurocentric curators. You’ll find pieces made from recycled e-waste, textiles stitched by refugee communities, and interactive maps showing how colonial borders still affect daily life today. It’s raw. It’s real. And it’s free to see.

What makes Tate Modern 2025 different isn’t just the art—it’s how you experience it. Audio guides are now voice-activated by your phone. You can tag your favorite pieces and build your own digital tour. There are weekly artist talks, but also silent viewing hours for people who just need quiet with the work. Even the café is part of the exhibit—serving food inspired by the cultures of the featured artists.

If you’ve ever walked through Tate Modern and felt lost, confused, or overwhelmed, this year is designed for you. No jargon. No pretense. Just powerful work, clear context, and space to sit with it. The gallery isn’t asking you to understand everything. It’s asking you to feel something.

Below, you’ll find a curated collection of articles that dig into what’s happening at Tate Modern 2025—from the hidden stories behind the exhibits to the best times to visit, how to avoid crowds, and which artists you shouldn’t miss. Whether you’re a first-time visitor or someone who comes every season, there’s something here that’ll make you see the place—and the art—differently.

London Art Exhibitions 2025: Complete Gallery Guide
Eamon Huxley - 11 November 2025

London Art Exhibitions 2025: Complete Gallery Guide

Discover the must-see London art exhibitions in 2025, from blockbuster shows at Tate Modern to hidden gems in East London. Learn how to skip lines, save money, and experience art without the crowds.

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