There’s going to be a double dose of David Hockney coming to the Tate galleries next year, with a takeover of Modern’s huge turbine hall, and an exhibition down the road at Britain.

They are part of the year of exhibitions announced by the Tate galleries.

Tate Modern highlights

Among the headline exhibitions, Monet: Painting Time (from 25th Feb) will be Tate Modern’s first show dedicated to Claude Monet. Drawing on new research, it will explore how the artist captured the passage of time, from fleeting light effects to the changing seasons, including works from his celebrated Water Lilies series.

Another first for Tate will be Ink (from 22nd April), an exhibition devoted to the tradition of ink painting. Focusing on 20th-century artists from mainland China, Hong Kong and Taiwan, it will examine how they transformed this historic practice into a modern art form, while retaining its philosophical links to nature.

The gallery will also stage the UK’s first solo exhibition of the Algerian artist Baya (from 10th June), bringing together more than 100 of her vividly coloured works.

Indian artist Nalini Malani (from 1st July) will be the subject of her largest exhibition to date, charting a six-decade career defined by immersive multimedia installations that blend myth, history and politics. Meanwhile, American sculptor Lynda Benglis (from 30th Sept) will be represented by more than 50 works, including her celebrated “pours”, which challenged traditional ideas of form and material.

A new exhibition on Edvard Munch (from 11th Nov) will offer a fresh perspective on the Norwegian painter by examining his work through the lens of cinema and visual storytelling, with input from contemporary filmmakers.

Alongside these exhibitions, Tate Modern will continue its programme of annual commissions, including installations in the Tanks and participatory summer projects. Its free displays will also be refreshed, including a presentation of Robert Rauschenberg’s work and a group show focusing on Lebanon in 1990.

Tate Britain programme

At Tate Britain, Sonia Boyce (from 24th March) will be the subject of a major survey exhibition spanning 40 years of work across installation, film, collage and sculpture. The show will explore her collaborative approach and her ongoing interest in memory, identity and shared experience.

A landmark exhibition marking 300 years since the birth of Thomas Gainsborough (from 20th May) will bring together around 120 works, contrasting his polished society portraits with the more experimental side of his practice.

Tate Britain will also stage the second of its Hockney exhibitions (from 7th Oct), with more than 200 works tracing his career from early explorations of queer identity in the 1960s through to recent, more intimate works made in his home and studio.

Looking further back in time, a major exhibition on Tudor art (from 18th Nov) will be Tate’s first on the period in three decades. Featuring over 150 objects, including paintings, miniatures and decorative works, it will explore how art developed during the reigns of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I, a formative period in the emergence of British painting.

Emerging artists will continue to be showcased through the gallery’s Art Now programme, while the Duveen Galleries will host a large-scale free display of contemporary sculpture drawn from Tate’s collection.