The Claude Monet "Painting Time" Solo Exhibit Heads to Tate Modern in 2027
Tate Modern’s 2027 program spotlights a landmark Monet exhibition alongside major moments for David Hockney and Baya.
by HB Team · HypebeastSummary
- Tate Modern just dropped its massive 2027 exhibition lineup, spotlighting its first-ever solo show dedicated to Claude Monet
- Opening in February 2027, “Monet: Painting Time” will dissect the Impressionist pioneer’s connection to the rapid industrialization of time
- The upcoming cultural calendar also celebrates David Hockney’s 90th birthday with a massive Turbine Hall takeover and introduces the UK’s first major solo show for Algerian modernist Baya
London’s Tate Modern is gearing up for a monumental 2027, officially pulling the curtain back on an exhibition slate headlined by its first-ever solo presentation of Claude Monet. Titled “Monet: Painting Time,” the hallmark showcase opens its doors on February 25, 2027, taking a deep dive into the founding Impressionist’s relationship with time at the dawn of the industrial age. Supported by Morgan Stanley and Anthropic, the exhibit will pool breathtaking, rarely seen works from international lenders to unpack how Monet captured the fleeting present against the backdrop of modern industry and standardized timekeeping.
Co-organized with the Musée de l’Orangerie in Paris, the comprehensive showcase will spotlight works like the iconic Water Lilies cycle and the 1877 masterpiece Arrival of the Normandy Train, Gare Saint-Lazare. Drawing on fresh scholarly research, the presentation will emphasize how Monet masterfully documented instantaneous moments, shifting seasons, and the profound evolution of modern societal pacing.
Beyond the Monet retrospective, Tate’s 2027 programming is locked in to deliver a vibrant array of heavy-hitters. Celebrating David Hockney‘s 90th birthday, Tate Modern will host an immersive multimedia installation inside the legendary Turbine Hall, heavily inspired by his lifelong passion for stage and opera design. Meanwhile, the museum will also debut the first major United Kingdom solo exhibition for Baya. The groundbreaking twentieth-century Algerian artist is revered for her bold, geometric gouache watercolors that ultimately influenced a generation of modernist icons, including Pablo Picasso.