Henri Matisse: The Cut-Outs is on display at Tate Modern in London through September 7.
Matisse: Innovator Until the End|Nico Hines|April 16, 2014|DAILY BEAST
It is exhibited at the Tate along with the mass of preparatory material he used to create it.
All Hail Richard Hamilton, the Father of British Pop Art|Chloë Ashby|February 22, 2014|DAILY BEAST
Gary Hume and Patrick Caulfield, Tate Britain, June 5–September 1.
Best of Art for June|William O’Connor|June 6, 2013|DAILY BEAST
This spring, his oeuvre was the subject of a retrospective at the Tate.
Revenge of the Nerds!|William O’Connor|May 30, 2013|DAILY BEAST
In fact, Tate wore the same t-shirt as the one Megan is wearing in a 1967 Esquire magazine shoot.
‘Mad Men’: The Bizarre Megan Draper as Sharon Tate Conspiracy Theory|Jace Lacob|May 29, 2013|DAILY BEAST
It is scarcely necessary to say, that Tate and Crawford left the field discomfited, and here the matter ended.
The Memories of Fifty Years|William H. Sparks
Maud, for one, never had cared for Mr. Tate, possibly because he seemed so little aware of her.
Selina|George Madden Martin
Although somewhat provectus in tate, he had won the affections of the landladys daughter, much to the annoyance of the mother.
Curious Epitaphs|William Andrews
He advanced in literary culture, under Mr. Tate's zealous lead, to consideration of "the novel," its history and development.
Turns about Town|Robert Cortes Holliday
Maupassant, Mr. Tate said, was the great master of the short story.
Turns about Town|Robert Cortes Holliday
British Dictionary definitions for Tate
Tate
/ (teɪt) /
noun
(John Orley) Allen. 1899–1979, US poet and critic
Sir Henry. 1819–99, British sugar refiner and philanthropist; founder of the Tate Gallery
Nahum (ˈneɪʊm). 1652–1715, British poet, dramatist, and hymn-writer, born in Ireland: poet laureate (1692–1715). He is best known for writing a version of King Lear with a happy ending