The Daily Telegraph

Mcqueen’s school photos are epic in scale but small in impact

- By Chris Harvey The billboards can be viewed across London until Nov 18 and will be at Tate Britain from Nov 12 to May 3 2020

Steve Mcqueen: Year 3

London, then Tate Britain ★★★★★

On Hackney Downs railway station in east London, lunchtime passengers were drifting past a large billboard photograph of a school year group, with barely a glance. No one seemed to know, or care, that it was part of artist Steve Mcqueen’s vast London-wide

Year 3 project. Even the station staff I had to ask for brief platform admittance knew of neither the work’s existence nor who Mcqueen was. “He’s the artist and film director who made 12 Years a Slave,” I offered. “He won an Oscar.” Proof, then, that the intersecti­on between the art world and the real world is tangential at best.

Neverthele­ss, the project is clearly an attempt to bridge the gap. The scale of it is remarkable: 76,000 children; 600 separate group portraits, pasted up beside roads, on high streets, opposite undergroun­d platforms, across 33 boroughs. A year and a half in the making. Consent forms to be signed for every child.

Of course, this most unfascinat­ing of images – the class photograph – holds few surprises. Nearly all of us have been there, done that, and got the reprint. School photograph­s are always of most interest to the children in them and their parents, although they latterly gain attention from adult friends entertaine­d by early examples of bad haircuts and goofy expression­s. As an image on a billboard, a school year group suggests, more than anything, an advert for a building society. Fill in your own slogan, including the words, “we” and “our future”.

In fact, Mcqueen’s work is described in similar terms – “an epic portrait of London’s future”. It features exclusivel­y primary schoolchil­dren of seven to eight years old (Year 3).

Artangel, which produces sitespecif­ic works and has collaborat­ed with the Tate (among others), has provided an online map of the locations of the billboards. I set off on a cycle tour and went to seven sites – following the map’s instructio­ns closely, sometimes retracing to search again – but disappoint­ingly found only two billboards… an absent image in E8, none out of three on the Seven Sisters Road.

Opposite Stoke Newington station, though, I studied an image of a class wearing green jumpers, with green and yellow-striped ties. Some had pigtails, some wore ribbons; most were in long trousers or skirts; a few wore glasses; one a pink ear stud. Some were laughing, some pulling faces, some were watchful, slightly wary. All were looking at the camera.

Some, I’m sure, will be capable of looking at such an image and seeing it as proof of London’s ever-shifting ethnicitie­s. At the last census in 2011, 44.9 per cent of the capital’s population identified as white British, while 37 per cent of the population were born outside the UK. Yet London has always been a melting-pot city that absorbs and assimilate­s and makes people its own, from Romans to Huguenots to Caribbeans. I’m half-irish, and it seems to have absorbed me.

Race does seem to be part of the DNA of the project, though; social class less so. I went to a primary school with two year-group classes with more than 30 pupils in each. Some schools have much smaller teacher-pupil ratios, but that sort of distributi­on wasn’t reflected in the billboards I saw, which depicted similar-sized groups.

The Year 3 project clearly needs its scale to achieve an impact beyond the individual images. The ones I saw looked like a group of school kids having their photograph taken; a small adventure, the attraction of which did not seem to be lost on the two teachers pictured with them. It’s a cheerful image, but it only comes into focus as part of the wider whole.

 ??  ?? Child’s play: a ‘Year 3’ photograph on a billboard at Finsbury Park tube station
Child’s play: a ‘Year 3’ photograph on a billboard at Finsbury Park tube station

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