Category: Looking Back
Issue 112 January-February 2008
Biennials, Surveys and Retrospectives
frieze asked the following critics and curators from around the world to choose what, and who, they felt to be the most significant shows and artists of 2007
Issue 112 January-February 2008
Solo Shows
frieze asked the following critics and curators from around the world to choose what, and who, they felt to be the most significant shows and artists of 2007
Issue 112 January-February 2008
Emerging Artists
frieze asked the following critics and curators from around the world to choose what, and who, they felt to be the most significant shows and artists of 2007
Issue 112 January-February 2008
10th International Istanbul Biennial
Curated by Hou Hanru, ‘Not Only Possible, But Also Necessary: Optimism in the Age of Global War’ was a solidly conceived exhibition that included 96 artists and collectives from 35 countries
Issue 104 January-February 2007
Biennials / Survey Shows
frieze asked critics and curators from around the world to choose what, and who, they felt to be the most significant shows and artists of 2006
Issue 104 January-February 2007
Retrospectives
frieze asked critics and curators from around the world to choose what, and who, they felt to be the most significant shows and artists of 2006
Issue 104 January-February 2007
27th Sao Paulo Biennial
‘How to Live Together’, was a compelling challenge to biennial models based on national representation
Issue 104 January-February 2007
Themed Shows
frieze asked the following critics and curators from around the world to choose what, and who, they felt to be the most significant shows and artists of 2006
Issue 104 January-February 2007
2nd Seville Biennial
Curated by Okwui Enwezor, ‘The Unhomely: Phantom Scenes in a Global Society’ seemed to ask: what kind of a mess are we in; why; and how do we get out of it?’
Issue 104 January-February 2007
Singapore, Shanghai and Gwangju Biennials
Three biennials in Singapore, China and Korea, themed around ‘Belief’, ‘Hyper-Design’ and ‘Fever Variations’
















