<p>Oscar-winning British director Steve McQueen is returning to his art roots with a series of short films at London's Tate Modern art gallery, offering a sensory exploration of black identity.</p>.<p>McQueen, who became the first black director to win the best picture Academy Award in 2014 for "12 Years a Slave", is now based between London and Amsterdam and is focused on championing diversity in the film industry.</p>.<p>Visitors to his new exhibition will be greeted by "Static", a film of New York's Statue of Liberty, scrutinising the iconic symbol from every possible angle at very close range against a deafening backdrop of the helicopter from where the footage was filmed.</p>.<p>"What interests Steve is our view of the world, how humans are trying to represent Liberty," said Fiontan Moran, assistant curator of the exhibition.</p>.<p>"7th Nov, 2001" features a still shot of a body while McQueen's cousin Marcus tells of how he accidentally killed his brother, a particularly traumatic experience for the artist.</p>.<p>"Western Deep" is another visceral work, giving a sense through sights and sounds in an interactive installation of the experiences of miners in South Africa, following them to the bottom of the mine.</p>.<p>"Ashes", meanwhile, is a tribute to a young fisherman from Grenada, the island where McQueen's family originated.</p>.<p>The images of beauty and sweetness filmed from his boat are tragically reversed on the other side of the projection screen, which shows a grave commissioned by McQueen for the eponymous young fisherman, who was killed by drug traffickers.</p>.<p>African-American singer, actor and civil rights activist Paul Robeson (1898-1976) is honoured in "End Credits".</p>.<p>The film shows censored FBI documents detailing the agency's surveillance of Robeson, read by a voice-over artist, for five hours.</p>.<p>"He is... testing the limits of how people can be documented in an era of mass surveillance," said Moran.</p>.<p>In a similarly militant vein, the exhibition features the sculpture "Weight", which was first shown in the prison cell where the writer and playwright Oscar Wilde was imprisoned.</p>.<p>It depicts a golden mosquito net draped over a metal prison bed frame, addressing the theme of confinement and the power of the imagination to break free.</p>.<p>The show runs alongside an exhibition of McQueen's giant portraits of London school classes, many of which appeared on the streets of London last year.</p>.<p>"I remember my first school trip to Tate when I was an impressionable eight-year-old, which was really the moment I gained an understanding that anything is possible," said McQueen, adding it was "where in some ways my journey as an artist first began".</p>.<p>He recently told the Financial Times newspaper the difference between his art films and his feature films was that the former were poetry, the latter like a novel.</p>.<p>"Poetry is condensed, precise, fragmented," he said. "The novel is the yarn".</p>.<p>The exhibition opens on February 13 and runs until May 11.</p>
<p>Oscar-winning British director Steve McQueen is returning to his art roots with a series of short films at London's Tate Modern art gallery, offering a sensory exploration of black identity.</p>.<p>McQueen, who became the first black director to win the best picture Academy Award in 2014 for "12 Years a Slave", is now based between London and Amsterdam and is focused on championing diversity in the film industry.</p>.<p>Visitors to his new exhibition will be greeted by "Static", a film of New York's Statue of Liberty, scrutinising the iconic symbol from every possible angle at very close range against a deafening backdrop of the helicopter from where the footage was filmed.</p>.<p>"What interests Steve is our view of the world, how humans are trying to represent Liberty," said Fiontan Moran, assistant curator of the exhibition.</p>.<p>"7th Nov, 2001" features a still shot of a body while McQueen's cousin Marcus tells of how he accidentally killed his brother, a particularly traumatic experience for the artist.</p>.<p>"Western Deep" is another visceral work, giving a sense through sights and sounds in an interactive installation of the experiences of miners in South Africa, following them to the bottom of the mine.</p>.<p>"Ashes", meanwhile, is a tribute to a young fisherman from Grenada, the island where McQueen's family originated.</p>.<p>The images of beauty and sweetness filmed from his boat are tragically reversed on the other side of the projection screen, which shows a grave commissioned by McQueen for the eponymous young fisherman, who was killed by drug traffickers.</p>.<p>African-American singer, actor and civil rights activist Paul Robeson (1898-1976) is honoured in "End Credits".</p>.<p>The film shows censored FBI documents detailing the agency's surveillance of Robeson, read by a voice-over artist, for five hours.</p>.<p>"He is... testing the limits of how people can be documented in an era of mass surveillance," said Moran.</p>.<p>In a similarly militant vein, the exhibition features the sculpture "Weight", which was first shown in the prison cell where the writer and playwright Oscar Wilde was imprisoned.</p>.<p>It depicts a golden mosquito net draped over a metal prison bed frame, addressing the theme of confinement and the power of the imagination to break free.</p>.<p>The show runs alongside an exhibition of McQueen's giant portraits of London school classes, many of which appeared on the streets of London last year.</p>.<p>"I remember my first school trip to Tate when I was an impressionable eight-year-old, which was really the moment I gained an understanding that anything is possible," said McQueen, adding it was "where in some ways my journey as an artist first began".</p>.<p>He recently told the Financial Times newspaper the difference between his art films and his feature films was that the former were poetry, the latter like a novel.</p>.<p>"Poetry is condensed, precise, fragmented," he said. "The novel is the yarn".</p>.<p>The exhibition opens on February 13 and runs until May 11.</p>