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Now booking Tate Modern Exhibition

Electric Dreams Art and Technology Before the Internet

28 November 2024 – 1 June 2025

Free for Members

Book tickets Become a Member

Samia Halaby Fold 2 1988, still from kinetic painting coded on an Amiga computer. Tate © Courtesy the artist and Sfeir-Semler Gallery, Beirut / Hamburg.

Discover how artists used machines and algorithms to create mesmerising and mind-bending art between the 1950s and the early 1990s

From the birth of op art to the dawn of the internet age, artists found new ways to engage the senses and play with our perception. Electric Dreams celebrates the early innovators of optical, kinetic, programmed and digital art, who pioneered a new era of immersive sensory installations and automatically-generated works.

This major exhibition brings together groundbreaking works by a wide range of international artists who engaged with science, technology and material innovation. Experience the psychedelic environments they created in the 1950s and 60s, built using mathematical principles, motorised components and new industrial processes. See how radical artists embraced the birth of digital technology in the 1970s and 1980s, experimenting with machine-made art and early home computing systems.

One of Tate Modern’s most ambitious exhibitions to date, Electric Dreams offers visitors a rare chance to experience incredible works of vintage tech art in action – a look back at how artists imagined the visual language of the future.

Presented in the Eyal Ofer Galleries

Supported by The Electric Dreams Exhibition Supporters Circle, Tate Americas Foundation, Tate International Council, Tate Patrons. Research supported by Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational in partnership with Hyundai Motor

Suzanne Treister Fictional Videogame Stills/Are You Dreaming? 1991-2 © Suzanne Treister

Carlos Cruz-Diez Environnement Chromointerférent, Paris 1974/2017 © Carlos Cruz-Diez / Bridgeman Images, Paris 2024

Monika Fleischmann & Wolfgang Strauss Liquid Views - Narcissus Mirror 1992

Eduardo Kac Horny 1985 Lent by the Tate Americas Foundation © Eduardo Kac

Heinz Mack during the shoot of the film 'TELE-MACK' in the Sahara desert, east of Oasis Kebili, Tunisia, 1968. Photo: Edwin Braun/VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn, 2024, DACS, London, 2024

All Tate Modern entrances are step-free. You can enter via the Turbine Hall and into the Natalie Bell Building on Holland Street, or into the Blavatnik Building on Sumner Street.

There are lifts to every floor of the Blavatnik and Natalie Bell buildings. Alternatively you can take the stairs.

  • Fully accessible toilets are located on every floor on the concourses.
  • A quiet room is available to use in the Natalie Bell Building on Level 4.
  • Ear defenders can be borrowed from the Ticket desks.

To help plan your visit to Tate Modern, have a look at our visual story. It includes photographs and information about what you can expect from a visit to the gallery.

Download Tate Modern map PDF

For more information before your visit:

  • Email hello@tate.org.uk
  • Call +44 (0)20 7887 8888 (daily 10.00–17.00)

Check all Tate Modern accessibility information

Tate Modern

Bankside
London SE1 9TG
Plan your visit

Dates

28 November 2024 – 1 June 2025

  • Advance booking is recommended
  • Members enjoy free entry – no need to book, just turn up with your card
  • Relaxed Hours on the third Tuesday of the month at 10.00–11.00

Pricing

£22 / Free for Members

Concessions available

£5 for Tate Collective. 16–25? Sign up and log in to book

How to book a school visit

Booking and Ticketing FAQs

Book tickets Become a Member

This exhibition includes rooms with low light levels and flashing lights

In partnership with

With additional support from

The Electric Dreams Exhibition Supporters Circle

The David Bermant Foundation

Marcin and Izabela Wiszniewski

Tate Americas Foundation

Tate International Council

Tate Patrons

Research supported by Hyundai Tate Research Centre: Transnational in partnership with Hyundai Motor

Related events

Left Right
  • Exhibition Access

    Relaxed Hours: Electric Dreams: Art and Technology Before the Internet

    A quieter time to experience incredible works of vintage tech art in action

    Tate Modern
    Third Tuesday of the month at 10.00–11.00
    £22 / Free for Members
  • Private view

    Members Private View: Electric Dreams

    Visit one of Tate Modern's most ambitious exhibitions to date

    Tate Modern
    27 Nov 2024, 3 Dec 2024
    Free
  • Members Hours

    Members Hours: Electric Dreams

    Visit the exhibition while the gallery is closed to the public

    Tate Modern
    30 Nov 2024, 1 Dec 2024, 7 Dec 2024, 8 Dec 2024
    Free

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