Tate Modern

Steve McQueen

13 Feb - 06 Sep 2020

Installation view of Steve McQueen Ashes 2002-2015 at Tate Modern, 2020. © Steve McQueen. Courtesy the artist, Thomas Dane Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery © Photo: Luke Walker
Installation view of Steve McQueen Once Upon a Time 2002 and Static 2009 at Tate Modern, 2020. © Steve McQueen. Courtesy the artist, Thomas Dane Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery © Photo: Luke Walker
Installation view of Steve McQueen End Credits 2012 at Tate Modern, 2020. © Steve McQueen. Courtesy the artist, Thomas Dane Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery © Photo: Luke Walker
Installation view of Steve McQueen Charlotte 2004 at Tate Modern, 2020. © Steve McQueen. Courtesy the artist, Thomas Dane Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery © Photo: Luke Walker
Steve McQueen
Illuminer 2001
Video still
© Steve McQueen. Courtesy the artist, Thomas Dane Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery
Steve McQueen
Charlotte 2004
Film still
© Steve McQueen. Courtesy the artist, Thomas Dane Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery
Steve McQueen
Static 2009
Video still
© Steve McQueen. Courtesy the artist, Thomas Dane Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery
Steve McQueen
7th Nov. 2001
Video still
© Steve McQueen. Courtesy the artist, Thomas Dane Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery
Steve McQueen
Exodus 1992-97
Video still
© Steve McQueen. Courtesy the artist, Thomas Dane Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery
Steve McQueen
Caribs’ Leap 2002
Video still
© Steve McQueen. Courtesy the artist, Thomas Dane Gallery and Marian Goodman Gallery
Tate Modern presents the first major exhibition of Steve McQueen’s artwork in the UK for 20 years.

London is Steve McQueen’s home town and a place that continues to inspire him. This is the first major exhibition of his work here since he won the Turner Prize in 1999. It features 14 major works spanning film, photography and sculpture, including his first film shot on a Super 8 camera, Exodus 1992/97, and the recent End Credits 2012–ongoing, McQueen’s homage to the African-American singer, actor and civil rights activist Paul Robeson, which is on show for the first time in the UK. Spanning two decades of his career, the exhibition will reveal how McQueen’s pioneering approaches to filmmaking have expanded the ways in which artists work with the medium, creating poignant portraits of time and place.

Over the last 25 years Steve McQueen has created some of the most innovative works of moving image designed for gallery spaces. He has also directed four critically acclaimed feature films, including the Academy Award-winning 12 Years a Slave.

One of the artworks, Caribs’ Leap, consists of two films. McQueen has chosen to show one film inside the exhibition, and the other on the front of Tate Modern, overlooking the River Thames, to create a link between Grenada and the everyday life of London.

 

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