Brendan Robert Neiland
© James F. Hunkin / National Portrait Gallery, London
Brendan Robert Neiland
by James F. Hunkin
bromide fibre print, May 2000
9 1/2 in. x 9 1/2 in. (240 mm x 240 mm) overall
Purchased, 2006
Photographs Collection
NPG x128183
Sitterback to top
- Brendan Robert Neiland (1941-), Artist; Keeper of the Royal Academy Schools. Sitter in 1 portrait.
Placesback to top
- Place made and portrayed: United Kingdom: England, London (Royal Academy of Arts, Piccadilly, London)
Events of 2000back to top
Current affairs
The world celebrates the start of a new millennium. Britain marks the occasion with a series of new buildings and landmarks including the Millennium Dome, the London Eye, the Millennium Bridge, and the Millennium Stadium. While the Dome was criticised by politicians and the public for wasting public funds, and the Bridge suffered initial stability problems, other projects have become major landscape and public attractions.Art and science
Tate Modern opens as a national gallery of international modern art under the directorship of Nicholas Serota. The gallery, housed in the former Bankside Power Station, took the novel step of arranging the collection by theme rather than chronologically. As well as the collection galleries, Tate Modern has two large temporary exhibition spaces, and commissions installation projects for the enormous Turbine Hall.International
British troops are deployed to Sierra Leone to establish order and evacuate foreign nationals from the country torn apart by civil war. Following a ceasefire President Kabbah declared the civil war officially over in 2002.George W. Bush becomes President of the United States after a close election where he lost the popular vote, but won the electoral vote thanks to a controversial Supreme Court decision on Florida.
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