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  • Best art exhibitions of 2008

  • By Time Out Art editors

  • Time Out's visual art critics present a run-down of their top ten exhibitions of 2008

    Best art exhibitions of 2008

    From Russia at the Royal Academy

  • 1. From Russia
    Royal Academy
    After the intrigue of poisoned sushi over the road, the RA’s art blockbuster was officially blocked by Russia, only to be given a last-minute reprieve. It was the outgoing exhibitions tsar Norman Rosenthal’s finest hour, with stunning French pictures from the Hermitage and Malevich’s black square, cross and circle as triumphant full-stops.

    2. Francis Bacon
    Tate Britain, until Jan 4 2009
    A bloody and gutsy display showing the dark destroyer of British painting in all his glory. For once the work, not the man, was given pride of place.

    3. Richard Serra
    Gagosian
    Steel slabs big enough to clad supertankers were squeezed into some of the largest galleries London has to offer and yet the experience was intimate and beguiling. Feature continues

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    4. Chantal Akerman
    Camden Arts Centre
    Where were all the women this year? Jenny Holzer had a gruesome but powerful showing, Cornelia Parker briefly resurfaced and Susan Hiller had two good shows, but in the museums only this quiet selection of films flew the flag for femininity.

    5. Nigel Cooke
    Stuart Shave Modern Art
    Grotty urban dereliction foregrounded Cooke’s mass portrayal of painterly disaffection, itself brilliantly masking a genuine talent. He needn’t have worried about the death of painting.

    6. Charles Avery
    Parasol Unit
    A reputation-cementing show for Avery’s creature creations. The superb book, as much as the exhibition itself, finally gave shape to his amorphous and morphing parallel universe.

    7. Psycho Buildings
    Hayward Gallery
    Summer fun was had by all that went boating on the terrace or clambering through the mazes, but the spectacle was at least matched by some curatorial bravado.

    8. Oscar Muñoz

    Rivington Place
    A great addition to London’s venues had a sleeper hit of loops and lies by a little-known Colombian artist.

    9. Street Art
    Tate Modern
    The best thing at the Modern this year wasn’t Rothko or whatever was in the Turbine Hall – it wasn’t even inside the building. Cladding its side profile with the international evolution of graffiti was a brave slap in the art world’s face.

    10. Marcel Broodthaers
    Milton Keynes Gallery
    Nominating a highlight of the year that wasn’t actually in London is perhaps the best tribute we can give to the wanton contradictions of this Belgian’s work.

  • Add your comment to this feature

2 comments

  1. Posted by Katharine Sorensen on 31 Dec 2008 13:04

    Yest Broodthaers at Milton Keynes Gallery was brilliant and great to see Time Out alerting its readership to excellence outside the capital. Don't miss the Arte Povera artist Gilberto Zorio showing there until 18 Jan.

  2. Posted by David on 19 Dec 2008 20:52

    Oscar Munoz is great. Absolutely an outstanding and brilliant artist.

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