The Art Institute of Chicago

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press release

Steve McQueen has had a 20-year career as a visual artist working primarily in moving images and is widely recognized as the director of the unflinching feature films Hunger (2008) and Shame (2011). As the holder of the largest collection of work by McQueen in any museum in the United States, the Art Institute of Chicago is proud to present, in the first large-scale survey ever devoted to the artist, 15 of his works, including one created specially for the exhibition and on view for the first time.

Born in London in 1969 to West Indian immigrants, McQueen made his first major work, Bear, in 1993 as he was completing his studies in the visual arts at Goldsmiths College. In the following two decades, he has produced a steady stream of evocative moving-image installations that blend elements of contemporary life and social commentary. His subject matter varies widely—meditations on immigration and diaspora, hip-hop culture, mining conditions in Africa, gun violence in Britain—but is always underscored by an emphasis on the individual body, often his own, as the surface on which contemporary life is written. Just as emphatically, McQueen uses film to explore the very essence of the medium itself. Distilled into contrasts between light and darkness, motion and stillness, and sound and silence, McQueen’s installations are formally rich and multifaceted, redrawing the boundaries between fine art and filmmaking. Also included in the exhibition and on view for the first time outside the United Kingdom is Queen and Country (2006), a project composed of stamps bearing portraits of the British men and women who lost their lives in Iraq, which McQueen completed as an official British war artist.

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Steve McQueen