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Sign up todayTracey Emin In Her Own Words
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Learn moreTracey Emin is an internationally renowned artist. Here she discusses her life and achievements in a series of interviews from the BBC radio and TV archives: Breakfast With Frost, BBC One (first broadcast 7 November 1999); Front Row, BBC Radio 4 (first broadcast 6 Sept 2000, featuring Francine Stock); Woman's Hour, BBC Radio 4 (first broadcast 9 Oct 2000, featuring Maud Hand); On the Ropes, BBC Radio 4 (first broadcast 24 July 2001, featuring John Humphrys); Woman's Hour, BBC Radio 4, (first broadcast 28 Nov 2002, featuring Jenni Murray); Breakfast With Frost, BBC One (first broadcast 30 May 2004); Desert Island Discs, BBC Radio 4 (first broadcast 28 Nov 2004, featuring Sue Lawley); Woman's Hour, BBC Radio 4 (first broadcast 15 March 2006, featuring Jenni Murray) and Mark Lawson Talks to Tracey Emin, BBC Four (first broadcast 14 March 2010).
Due to the age and nature of this archive material, the sound quality may vary.
ยฉ2022 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd (P)2022 BBC Studios Distribution Ltd
Tracey Emin is a well-known contemporary artist, one of the group of YBAs (Young British Artists) who included Damien Hirst, Sarah Lucas and Gillian Wearing. Emin burst on to the artistic scene in 1997 when her seminal work, a tent appliquรฉd with names and entitled Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963โ1995, was shown at Charles Saatchi's Sensation exhibition. It was purchased by Saatchi, but destroyed in the Momart fire in 2004. Her next iconic work was My Bed, showing a disordered bed with stained sheets and detritus such as condoms, cigarette butts, empty bottles and dirty knickers littered around it. This was shortlisted for the Turner prize, bought by Saatchi for ยฃ150,000 and displayed at the Saatchi Gallery. Emin's work is highly expressionistic, and often refers to traumatic events in her life or memories of growing up in the seaside town of Margate. She works in a wide variety of media, including painting, photography, appliquรฉ, sculpture and neon text. Her work has been shown worldwide, and she has had numerous solo exhibitions including a 2007 show at the Venice Biennale (she was only the second woman to put on a solo show there, after Rachel Whiteread); a 2008 retrospective, Twenty Years, which attracted a record 40,000 visitors to the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art; and a 2014 show at London's White Cube Gallery, The Last Great Adventure is You, which was highly acclaimed. In 2012, she mentored a young artist to produce artwork for twelve British Airways planes in the run-up to the London Olympics. She also produced a poster and limited edition print for the Olympics and Paralympics, and carried the Olympic torch through Margate. She was chosen to redesign the Brit Award statuette for the 2015 ceremony, and her design, featuring a patchwork rosette, was hailed by Brits chairman Max Lousada as 'bold, brilliant, colourful and inventive'. In 2013, Emin was awarded the CBE for services to the arts. The same year, Woman's Hour voted her one of the 100 most powerful women in Britain.
Tracey Emin is a well-known contemporary artist, one of the group of YBAs (Young British Artists) who included Damien Hirst, Sarah Lucas and Gillian Wearing. Emin burst on to the artistic scene in 1997 when her seminal work, a tent appliquรฉd with names and entitled Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963โ1995, was shown at Charles Saatchi's Sensation exhibition. It was purchased by Saatchi, but destroyed in the Momart fire in 2004. Her next iconic work was My Bed, showing a disordered bed with stained sheets and detritus such as condoms, cigarette butts, empty bottles and dirty knickers littered around it. This was shortlisted for the Turner prize, bought by Saatchi for ยฃ150,000 and displayed at the Saatchi Gallery. Emin's work is highly expressionistic, and often refers to traumatic events in her life or memories of growing up in the seaside town of Margate. She works in a wide variety of media, including painting, photography, appliquรฉ, sculpture and neon text. Her work has been shown worldwide, and she has had numerous solo exhibitions including a 2007 show at the Venice Biennale (she was only the second woman to put on a solo show there, after Rachel Whiteread); a 2008 retrospective, Twenty Years, which attracted a record 40,000 visitors to the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art; and a 2014 show at London's White Cube Gallery, The Last Great Adventure is You, which was highly acclaimed. In 2012, she mentored a young artist to produce artwork for twelve British Airways planes in the run-up to the London Olympics. She also produced a poster and limited edition print for the Olympics and Paralympics, and carried the Olympic torch through Margate. She was chosen to redesign the Brit Award statuette for the 2015 ceremony, and her design, featuring a patchwork rosette, was hailed by Brits chairman Max Lousada as 'bold, brilliant, colourful and inventive'. In 2013, Emin was awarded the CBE for services to the arts. The same year, Woman's Hour voted her one of the 100 most powerful women in Britain.