Friday, 30 December 2011

The best shows, the biggest news – the year in art | Art and design | guardian.co.uk

The best shows, the biggest news – the year in art

From Ai Weiwei to Urs Fischer, Jonathan Jones looks back at 2011's biggest art stories – and sets out essential dates for your 2012 diary in our Art Weekly annual roundup

Portrait of a Young Man by Leonardo da Vinci
Portrait of a Young Man is among treasures on display at the National Gallery's blockbuster Leonardo exhibition. Photograph: Veneranda Biblioteca Ambrosiana

Top exhibitions of 2011

Leonardo da Vinci: Painter at the Court of Milan
This is not the definitive Leonardo da Vinci exhibition simply because there can be no such thing. It is a great show because it is passionate and honest – curator Luke Syson comes out from behind the mask of objective scholarship and champions the Leonardo he personally loves. It is a beautiful event that will inspire many people to look in new and rich ways at this supreme artist.
• At National Gallery, London WC2N, until 5 February 2012

Gerhard Richter: Panorama
There are some easy cliched views of this powerful modern painter. He debunks painting, he blurs photographic certainties, he rejects the metaphysical. None of those pat explanations of his art survive this brilliant retrospective that reveals the abundance and curiosity of his approach. It is simply a stupendous encounter with an exemplary artist of our time.
• At Tate Modern, London SE1, until 8 January 2012

Martin Creed
The throwaway luxury of providing many-coloured marble stairs for drinkers and shoppers and tourists to tread on their way between Edinburgh's Old Town and Waverley Station is a daring piece of public art. So modest that it almost refuses to be art at all, and so generous that it serves as a utopian call for a better civic life, this is a radical and beautiful work.
• At the Scotsman Steps, Edinburgh

The Cult of Beauty
The stuffy old Victorians, you say? Actually they were hedonists, experimentalists and decadent subversives, according to this mind-changing revelation of 19th-century cultural daring. The V&A's resurrection of the Aesthetic Movement was a remarkable event that blew away the cobwebs from the age of Ruskin and Morris.
• At V&A, London SW7

Joan Miró
In an excellent run of exhibitions at Tate Modern, this was a dazzling jewel of abstract energy. It strove to see Miró as a deeply political artist which is fair enough, but the glory of the exhibition lay in seeing his evolution from an intense visionary of his native Catalan landscapes to a free poetic dreamer of the minds's remote voids.
• At Tate Modern, London SE1

Twombly and Poussin: Arcadian Painters
It was not the perfect Twombly exhibit but this comparison of the great American painter's sensuous lyrics of misty pigment with the classicism of Poussin was fated to become a historic event. Cy Twombly died during its run and the show, in a gallery designed by John Soane that includes a mausoleum, gave those of us who loved his paintings a place to mark the passing of a giant.
• At Dulwich Picture Gallery, London SE21

The story of art in 2011

Ai Weiwei naked protest Ai Weiwei and supporters staged nude protests against his detention by the Chinese state. Photograph: Zhao Zhao/Reuters

Ai Weiwei was detained in China, and fans came to his aid with money and nudity

Leonardo was a sold out showstopper, with Lady with an Ermine, two Virgins of the Rocks, winding queues and threats of staff strikes

Tanks and candlemen melting into eternity turned heads at the Venice Biennale

Martin Boyce took the Turner, and Charles Saatchi castigated the art world

Tracey Emin had a hit show looking back, and got a new job at the Royal Academy to look forward to

We lost some of the art world's biggest wave-makers – Lucian Freud, Richard Hamilton and Cy Twombly

Miró and Magritte brought fans of fine lines and floating bankers flocking to London and Liverpool

New art spaces were named after old stars – Hepworth and Turner – the Scottish Portrait Gallery reopened, and we celebrated 10 years of free museum entry

What to look forward to in 2012

Yoko Ono Yoko Ono will be uploading smiles from around the world for a show at the Serpentine in summer 2012. Photograph: Startraks Photo /Rex Features

Yoko Ono uploading the world's smiles for a summer Serpentine show

Seeing Lucian Freud's final portrait at the National Portrait Gallery

Two new Frieze weeks

English National Ballet taking up residence at the Tate alongside Picasso

Liverpool welcoming the Water Lilies to these shores

The Hayward getting hilarious with Jeremy Deller and David Shrigley

Seeing the Bigger Picture with David Hockney at Royal Academy

Damien Hirst's crystal skull filling the Tate Turbine Hall during the London Olympics
The best shows, the biggest news – the year in art | Art and design | guardian.co.uk

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