Skip navigation

Main menu

  • What's On
  • Visit
  • Art
    • Discover Art
    • Artists
    • Artworks
    • Stories
    Stories
    Stories

    Watch, listen and read

  • Learn
    • Schools
    • Tate Kids
    • Research
    • Activities and workshops
    Tate Kids
    Tate Kids

    Games, quizzes and films for kids

  • Shop
Become a Member
  • Tate Britain
    Tate Britain Free admission
  • Tate Modern
    Tate Modern Free admission
  • Tate Liverpool + RIBA North
    Tate Liverpool + RIBA North Free admission
  • Tate St Ives
    Tate St Ives Ticket or membership card required
  • Families
  • Accessibility
  • Schools
  • Private tours
  • Discover Art
  • Artists
  • Artworks
  • Stories
  • Schools
  • Tate Kids
  • Research
  • Activities and workshops
Tate Logo
Become a Member
Tate Liverpool + RIBA North Conference

Sleeping Giants: Theories of Sleep in Art and Philosophy from Ancient Greece to the Present Night

14 October 2016 at 19.00–21.00

Take part in a one day symposium considering the impact of sleep on culture and art history

To coincide with the Ancient Greece Episode at Tate Liverpool, this panel explores sleep as an important, but often overlooked part of culture, and the subject of numerous artworks.

The panel presents the work of two writers who each propose theories and philosophies of sleep. Join them to explore sleep as both a space in which stories are told and times are travelled; an act full of delight and materiality, offering an escape from the pace of everyday life.

“Sleeping Beauties and Vigilant Monsters, on the Politics and Aesthetics of Sleep”.

Dr. Alexei Penzin will discuss Perrault’s “Sleeping Beauty” fairy tale, linking its interpretation to the problem of vigilance and sleep in the ancient Greek philosophy, as well as to medieval and early modern political theology of sovereignty and to early capitalist modernity and elaborate an aesthetics of sleep in the contemporary context.

“The Elements of Sleep”

Prof. Matthew Fuller will draw on his book ‘How to Sleep, in art, biology and culture’, in order to discuss the relations between sleep science and an aesthetics without a subject.  In most accounts and representations of sleep, the sleeper becomes a null field, a placeholder for a thinking being, something that will come back to its senses in due course. Drawing on the pre-socratic philosopher Empedocles, an aesthetics of sleep as a bodily, mediatic and ecological admixture of forces is counterposed to this imagined emptiness of sleep.

Tate Liverpool + RIBA North

Mann Island
Liverpool
Plan your visit

Date & Time

14 October 2016 at 19.00–21.00

Artwork
Close

Join in

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Sign up to emails

Sign up to emails

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Tate’s privacy policy

About

  • About us
  • Our collection
  • Terms and copyright
  • Governance
  • Picture library
  • ARTIST ROOMS
  • Tate Kids

Support

  • Tate Collective
  • Members
  • Patrons
  • Donate
  • Corporate
  • My account
  • Press
  • Jobs
  • Accessibility
  • Privacy
  • Cookies
  • Contact
© The Board of Trustees of the Tate Gallery, 2026
All rights reserved