Developing an intensely personal oeuvre packed with confrontational, brutally honest reflections …
Read moreDeveloping an intensely personal oeuvre packed with confrontational, brutally honest reflections upon the self, Tracey Emin is perhaps the most pioneering female artist of our time. This is a selection of Emin’s iPad sketches, featuring the artist’s personal themes and characteristic hand. Emin was involved in …
Read moreA prominent member of the Young British Artists (YBAs), Emin works in a wide range of mediums, including film, painting, neon, embroidery, drawing, installation, and sculpture. Her work is intensely personal, revealing intimate details of her life with brutal honesty and poetic humor. She has spoken of “the narcissism behind what I do—the self, self, self—and how difficult it is for me to really share things, even though I think I am sharing all the time.” This paradoxical approach—at once audacious and confessional, narcissistic and self-deprecatory—earned Emin a nomination for the Turner Prize in 1999. Though she did not win, Emin received significant acclaim for her installation titled My Bed, which featured the artist’s unmade bed surrounded by personal items (from slippers to empty liquor bottles, cigarette butts, and condoms), exploring the allegorical qualities of a bed as a place of birth, sex, and death.
Developing an intensely personal oeuvre packed with confrontational, brutally honest reflections …
Read moreDeveloping an intensely personal oeuvre packed with confrontational, brutally honest reflections upon the self, Tracey Emin is perhaps the most pioneering female artist of our time. This is a selection of Emin’s iPad sketches, featuring the artist’s personal themes and characteristic hand. Emin was involved in …
Read moreA prominent member of the Young British Artists (YBAs), Emin works in a wide range of mediums, including film, painting, neon, embroidery, drawing, installation, and sculpture. Her work is intensely personal, revealing intimate details of her life with brutal honesty and poetic humor. She has spoken of “the narcissism behind what I do—the self, self, self—and how difficult it is for me to really share things, even though I think I am sharing all the time.” This paradoxical approach—at once audacious and confessional, narcissistic and self-deprecatory—earned Emin a nomination for the Turner Prize in 1999. Though she did not win, Emin received significant acclaim for her installation titled My Bed, which featured the artist’s unmade bed surrounded by personal items (from slippers to empty liquor bottles, cigarette butts, and condoms), exploring the allegorical qualities of a bed as a place of birth, sex, and death.