
Untitled (Vitrine)
1983
‘Shower’, Richard Wentworth, 1984 | Tate
“Richard Wentworth’s sculpture typically takes mundane objects and transforms their role and identity. He gives everyday items like chairs, tables and buckets a double role, to disrupt their conventional significance. Shower demonstrates Wentworth’s affection for the commonplace, combining a 1950s table and a model ship’s propeller. The propeller is fixed to the table, as if to a boat, like childhood games in which items of furniture become imaginary vehicles. The plate suggests that the table is anchored to the floor. The title refers to a memory of seeing tilted tables outside a café during a heavy shower in Spain.”
—Gallery label, May 2007
‘People’, León Ferrari, c.1982, 2007 | Tate

Texts
excerpts from poems by Denise Levertov and the Latin Ordinary of the Mass

‘Dad’, Tracey Emin, 1993 | Tate

Memory of My Youth in the Mountains by Joseph Beuys
Xiu Xiu: “Unclouded Sky”

Erwin Wurm: One Minute Sculptures (1997) © Erwin Wurm

agnes martin | wheat, 1957

Eva Hesse: Accretion, 1968. Polyester rein. Installation variable, 50 units, each 58 x 2 ½ Inches. Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo, The Netherlands. Photo: Abby Robinson, New York © The Estate of Eva Hesse. Courtesy Hauser & Wirth.