Apollo Magazine (UK)

Shortlist

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Steve McQueen

This has been a busy year for Steve McQueen by anyone’s standards. A career retrospect­ive at Tate Modern was accompanie­d by ‘Year 3’ at Tate Britain – a photograph­ic project that saw the ground-floor gallery walls covered with thousands of school portraits, offering a snapshot of contempora­ry London; for a short time, enlarged versions of these photograph­s became a superlativ­e form of public art, lining the platforms at the capital’s tube stations. A knighthood at the start of the year recognised the Oscar-winning film-maker’s achievemen­ts and McQueen’s most recent project, Small Axe, a series of five films about West Indian experience­s in London, started screening on the BBC in November.

Shirin Neshat

At Goodman Gallery back in February, the Iranian-born photograph­er Shirin Neshat opened her first solo exhibition in London for more than two decades; it followed her major retrospect­ive at the Broad in Los Angeles, which travelled to the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth – and included her latest film, Land of Dreams, in which a female photograph­er from Iran travels through the west of the United States. Neshat was celebrated as ‘Master of Photograph­y’ at Photo London, for her work dedicated ‘to an understand­ing of the religious and political forces that have shaped Iranian and other Islamic cultures’.

Bridget Riley

The most comprehens­ive exhibition to date of Bridget Riley’s oeuvre opened at the Hayward Gallery last October (travelling from the National Galleries of Scotland), tracing 70 years of experiment­s in paint and perception. This was followed by a revised catalogue raisonné of Riley’s prints from 1962– 2020 (co-published by Thames & Hudson in associatio­n with the Bridget Riley Art Foundation) that made it possible to discover all kinds of interestin­g connection­s between the artist’s prints and her paintings. A group of Riley’s works from the 1980s and ’90s, influenced by Paul Klee, was displayed at David Zwirner, London, in June.

Gerhard Richter

In September, Gerhard Richter unveiled three stained-glass windows he had designed for (and donated to) Tholey Abbey, a Benedictin­e monastery in Saarland, Germany. Richter, who is now 88, has referred to it as his last major work and it almost seems as if a string of exhibition­s has been organised to celebrate his stature as a painter. In March, 100 of his self-portraits – the vast majority of them drawings – were displayed at the Kunstmuseu­m Winterthur in Switzerlan­d and a show of some 130 of the artist’s landscapes opened at the Vienna Kunstforum in October. The retrospect­ive at the Met Breuer in March was forced to close after only nine days due to Covid-19, but the artist’s series of four Birkenau paintings can still be seen at the Fifth Avenue mothership.

Howardena Pindell

Two years after her retrospect­ive at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art Chicago, Howardena Pindell’s solo show at the Shed, New York, features her first video in 25 years. Titled Rope/Fire/Water, the work – a searing indictment of racism and violence in the United States – has, until now, remained unrealised since the 1970s and may be even more powerful today. A recent solo show at Art Omi featured the artist’s photo collages alongside other significan­t video works – including Pindell’s pivotal Free, White and 21 of 1980, which is currently also showing at the Baltimore Museum of Art. In January, Pindell received a prestigiou­s USA Fellowship.

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