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self-help guide to tate modern tate modern art - Dropping in to Tate Modern's new underground oil tank spaces this summer might mean visiting a performance of minimalist dance, getting involved in a debate on which it really is being an immigrant or experiencing work by a painter who lately filmed naked men playing five-a-side football.

www.newartnetwork.net/tate-modern - The gallery has revealed details of the Tanks, referred to as the earth's first museum space dedicated permanently to live art, installation and gratifaction. They'll open on 18 July, Ten days before the Olympics, and become filled come july 1st and autumn using a 15-week festival of art. Tate Modern director, Nicholas Serota, referred to as Tanks incredible spaces and said the festival was obviously a extreme fun moment for Tate. As the gallery had for ages been an enthusiastic collector and exhibitor of installation and live art, the Tanks offered something totally new, he explained. "The public needs to engage these works in an exceedingly different way from simply moving in to some gallery and observing the work on the ground or perhaps a wall. "The Tanks are the first spaces dedicated permanently to live art, installation and gratifaction in almost any museum building anywhere in the world." The newest spaces are three 30-metre-wide concrete oil tanks decommissioned greater than 3 decades ago. You will be used as back-of-house even though the other two will permanently show live art, performance, film and installation as well as hosting symposiums and conferences. The East Tank is going to be absorbed come early july by a single new work by a Korean artist, Sung Hwan Kim, who'll tell a tale using drawing and writing as well as music, video, sound and sculpture.

Operate in the South Tank will be "constantly changing, constantly evolving, constantly shifting. When you dropped you could see something distinct from what you saw the previous day, or even the previous week," said the curator of film, Stuart Comer. The initial project will feature the choreographer Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker adapting a minimalist dance work she first performed in 1982 called Fase: Four Movements for the Music of Steve Reich, consisting of three duets and one solo.

tate modern - Another artist within the South Tank could be the young Briton Eddie Peake who this year showed a film in men playing football naked. Comer said: "He is very interested in aspects of voyeurism and sexuality, specifically a mans body. He will be having a new project for this space answering those interests also to the area itself."