Mire Lee’s Turbine Hall review – as kitsch as tatty Halloween decorations

Mire Lee’s Turbine Hall review – as kitsch as tatty Halloween decorations

Tate Modern, London
The Korean artist’s hanging sculpture of a turbine oozing brown liquid aims to frighten and disgust – but this hackneyed effort doesn’t even smell

Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall commission is always a daunting prospect for an artist. Since Louise Bourgeois first occupied the space in 2000, soon after the museum opened, with her towers and a gigantic spider, there have been 22 commissions, some more memorable than others.

We’ve had artificial sunsets and a funfair of slides. We’ve seen piles of ceramic sunflower seeds, a crack in the floor, lots of hanging cloths and knotted ropes, a sound installation, live storytellers, a spatial conundrum, fish floating in the air and a giant femidom-thing. Whatever next? We’ve become familiar with the unfamiliar and expectation now vies with a certain ennui. As well as an invitation, the commission (sponsored by Hyundai since 2015) is also a challenge, as each narrows the formal options for whoever, and whatever, comes next.

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