
Steve McQueen—the British film director, producer, screenwriter, and video artist whose Caribbean heritage (Grenada, Trinidad & Tobago) often fuels his work—has created an exhibition of light and sound, “Bass,” which is on view at Schaulager Basel and Dia Art Foundation (in Beacon, New York) until November 16, 2025. Here are excerpts from a beautiful exhibition review by María Inés Plaza Lazo for Contemporary And (C&). She writes, “In contrast to his 2013 survey at Schaulager museum, which spanned across video, photography, and installation, Steve McQueen’s Bass retreats from the image. It composes a threshold. A depth…”
The bunker held its breath, and from deep within its concrete belly, a low frequency began to surface — not as sound at first, but as light. The bass didn’t throb through impatient bodies of visitors but shimmered through a slow flicker of color washing the room, lingering behind my eyelids.
It was empty by the time I arrived. No Art Basel hum, no footsteps pacing in sync with deadlines. The Schaulager is a concrete stronghold built to control light and temperature, and its architecture reveals its contradictions under Steve McQueen’s dramatic compositions. ‘Institutions must interrogate their bunker-like impulse’, argued Karen Archey during a symposium titled Rethinking the Museum, held last June at K20 in Düsseldorf. The impulse to contain, preserve, isolate. In Bass, McQueen must also have departed from the question of topography. He reconditions rather than destroys it. The space transforms from fortress into vessel — a structure of containment forced to resonate.
As a choreography of resonance, shadow, and hue, the installation draws us into another temporality. The walls are stripped of visuals, yet the work is anything but empty. It pulses with presence. This is a sonic structure that is neither soundtrack nor sculpture. It is sedimentary. Music not as accompaniment, but as strata. As a foundation. As code.
McQueen collaborated with musician Marcus Miller to bring together an intergenerational ensemble of bassists for an improvised composition recorded at Dia Beacon in early 2024. Laura-Simone Martin, Mamadou Kouyaté, Aston Barrett Jr., and Meshell Ndegeocello each played a different type of bass, with each instrument registering a frequency of Diaspora, a lineage of Black sonic intelligence. Through Bass emerges a new grammar of duration: its time is tidal, not chronological. Three hours of sound loop against thirty minutes of mutating light, creating climates according to colors and notes. One does not view the work so much as endure it. There is no beginning, no plot. We enter a continuum, and when we leave it continues with or without us.
For me, this immersive atmosphere echoes Algorithm Ocean True Blood Moves, a dance performance by Julien Creuzet shown in New York and Amsterdam in 2023 and 2024. Born in France and raised in Martinique, Creuzet is a poet, artist, and filmmaker whose hybrid practice weaves Caribbean histories with futuristic poetics, operating between languages, geographies, and temporalities. In this work he collaborated with Brazilian-Haitian choreographer and researcher Ana Pi, whose work centers on the transmission of Afro-diasporic gestures and the politics of bodily presence. Pi’s choreography in Algorithm mapped diasporic memory through movement drawn from Black Atlantic archives – gestures traced from YouTube to Haiti, from Brazil to Martinique, and sampled by DJ Natoxy. Creuzet’s methodology, like McQueen’s for this exhibition, works beneath the surface. Both prefer drift to destination, minimalism to overexplanation.
McQueen’s use of minimalism refuses the neutralism historically attached to the term and method. If minimalism has been defined by its reduction of form, repetition, and emphasis on pure perception – often framed as apolitical or universal – McQueen’s version is about resonance. Each note and each hue returns with the memory of previous ones. The frequencies of Bass are oceanic. They don’t travel across the surface, they reverberate from below. The bass doesn’t anchor the music; it absorbs and redistributes gravity. It thickens the air. As sound deepens, so does the light. [. . .]
This is a post-apocalyptic condition that McQueen has evoked elsewhere: one of continuous survival in the aftermath. After every catastrophe. After slavery. After silence. Other films that McQueen has made for exhibition contexts – Sunshine State (2022), Bounty (2025), Occupied City (2023) – similarly refuse instruction. They do not explain grief. They house it. They frame it not as a moment but as an atmosphere. Here the bass is the protagonist. The bassline is the undercurrent that persists when narrative fails. [. . .]
For full article, see https://contemporaryand.com/magazines/steve-mcqueen-the-bassline-as-sonic-intelligence/
Also see https://www.mariangoodman.com/exhibitions/607-steve-mqueen-bounty/ and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_McQueen_(director)
[Photo above by Pati Grabowicz: Steve McQueen, Bass, 2024, LED Light and Sound, Courtesy the artist, Co-commissioned work by Laurenz Foundation, Schaulager Basel and Dia Art Foundation, 15 June – 16 November 2025, Schaulager® Münchenstein/Basel (Installation view).]