Early life and education , Tracey Emin,
Charles Thomson,
Billy Childish and Russell Wilkins at the
Rochester Adult Education Centre 11 December 1987 to record
The Medway Poets LP Tracey Karima Emin was born on 3 July 1963 in
Croydon, a district of
south London, to an English mother of
Romanichal descent and a
Turkish Cypriot father. She was brought up in
Margate, Kent, with her twin brother, Paul. Emin shares a paternal great-grandfather with her second cousin
Meral Hussein-Ece, Baroness Hussein-Ece. Her work has been analysed within the context of early adolescent and childhood abuse, as well as sexual assault. Emin was raped at the age of 13 while living in Margate, citing assaults in the area as "what happened to a lot of girls." Emin later said in an article she wrote for the
Evening Standard that she had "no memory of being a virgin", citing numerous times she was raped as a young teenager. She studied fashion at
Medway College of Design (now part of the
University for the Creative Arts) (1980–82). There she met expelled student
Billy Childish and was associated with
The Medway Poets. Emin and Childish were a couple until 1987, during which time she was the administrator for his small press,
Hangman Books, which published his confessional poetry. she studied printmaking at
Maidstone Art College (now part of the
University for the Creative Arts) where she graduated with a first class degree in
Printmaking. Also, whilst at Maidstone college of Art, Tracey Emin encountered Roberto Navickas aka Roberto Navikas, a name which was later to feature prominently in her "tent". Emin however, mistakenly misspelled his name by dropping a C. Navickas used this error to promote two artworks of his own, some twenty odd years later when re-entering the art world. The works were titled "The Lost C of Emin: The Discovery" & "The Lost C of Emin: A Reliquary" (see tent below). In 1995, she was interviewed in the
Minky Manky show catalogue by
Carl Freedman, who asked her, "Which person do you think has had the greatest influence on your life?" To which she replied, "Uhmm... It's not a person really. It was more a time, going to
Maidstone College of Art, hanging around with Billy Childish, living by the
River Medway". In 1987, Emin moved to London to study at the
Royal College of Art, where in 1989 she obtained an
MA in painting. After graduation, she had two traumatic
abortions and those experiences led her to destroy all the art she had produced in graduate school and later described the period as "emotional suicide". One of the paintings that survives from her time at Royal College of Art is
Friendship, which is in that university’s Collection. A series of photographs from her early work that was not destroyed was displayed as part of
My Major Retrospective, a solo exhibition held at the
White Cube gallery in London, from 19 November, 1993 to 8 January, 1994. Her influences include
Edvard Munch and
Egon Schiele, and for a time she studied philosophy at
Birkbeck, University of London.
Career beginnings On 3 January 1993, Emin opened a shop with fellow artist
Sarah Lucas, called
The Shop at 103 Bethnal Green Road in
Bethnal Green, which sold works by the two of them, including
T-shirts and
ashtrays with
Damien Hirst's picture stuck to the bottom (referencing the cigarette works he was doing at the time). The venue also contained a life-drawing room in the basement and studio space where Emin and Lucas worked. It was called
My Major Retrospective and was
autobiographical, consisting of personal photographs, photos of her (destroyed) early paintings, as well as items which most artists would not consider showing in public (such as a packet of cigarettes her uncle was holding when he was decapitated in a car crash). In the mid-1990s, Emin had a relationship with
Carl Freedman, who had been an early friend of, and collaborator with,
Damien Hirst, and who had co-curated seminal
Britart shows, such as
Modern Medicine and
Gambler. In 1994, they toured the US together, driving in a
Cadillac from
San Francisco to New York, and making stops en route where she gave readings from her autobiographical book
Exploration of the Soul to finance the trip. The couple spent time by the sea in
Whitstable together, using a
beach hut that she uprooted and turned into art in 1999 with the title ''The Last Thing I Said to You is Don't Leave Me Here'', which was destroyed in the 2004
Momart warehouse fire. at the
South London Gallery. Emin has said, The result was her "tent"
Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963–1995, which was first exhibited in the show. It was a blue tent, appliquéd with the names of everyone she has slept with. These included sexual partners, plus relatives she slept with as a child, her twin brother and her two aborted children. The needlework which is integral to this work was used by Emin in a number of her other pieces. This piece was later bought by
Charles Saatchi and included in the successful 1997
Sensation exhibition at the Royal Academy; it then toured to Berlin and New York. It, too, was destroyed by the fire in Saatchi's east London warehouse, in 2004.
Public recognition Emin was largely unknown by the public until she appeared on a
Channel 4 television programme in 1997,
"Is Painting Dead?". The show comprised a group discussion about that year's
Turner Prize and was broadcast live. Emin was drunk, slurred and swore before walking out of the interview. '' by Tracey Emin Two years later, in 1999, Emin was shortlisted for the Turner Prize herself and exhibited
My Bed at the
Tate Gallery. Two performance artists,
Yuan Chai and Jian Jun Xi, jumped onto the bed with bare torsos to "improve" the work, which they thought had not gone far enough. In July 1999, at the height of Emin's
Turner Prize fame, she created a number of
monoprints drawings inspired by the public and private life of
Diana, Princess of Wales for a themed exhibition called
Temple of Diana held at The Blue Gallery, London. Works such as
They Wanted You To Be Destroyed (1999) related to Diana's
bulimia, while other
monoprints included affectionate texts such as
Love Was on Your Side and a description of Diana's
dress with puffy sleeves. Other drawings highlighted
The things you did to help other people written next to a drawing by Emin of
Diana, Princess of Wales in protective clothing walking through a minefield in Angola. Another work was a delicate sketch of a rose drawn next to the phrase "It makes perfect sence (sic) to know they killed you" referring to the conspiracy theories surrounding Diana's death. Emin herself described the drawings, saying they "could be considered quite scrappy, fresh, kind of naïve looking drawings" and "It's pretty difficult for me to do drawings not about me and about someone else. But I did have a lot of ideas. They're quite sentimental I think and there's nothing cynical about it whatsoever."
Elton John collects Emin's work, as did
George Michael. Michael and his partner
Kenny Goss held the
A Tribute To Tracey Emin exhibition in September 2007 at their Dallas-based museum, the Goss-Michael Foundation (formerly Goss Gallery). This was the inaugural exhibition for the gallery which displayed a variety of Emin works from a large blanket, video installations, prints, paintings and a number of neon works including a special neon piece
George Loves Kenny (2007) which was the centrepiece of the exhibition, developed by Emin after she wrote an article for
The Independent newspaper in February 2007 with the same title. Goss and Michael (died 25 December 2016), acquired 25 works by Emin. Other celebrities and musicians who support Emin's art include models
Jerry Hall and
Naomi Campbell, film star
Orlando Bloom, who bought a number of Emin's works at charity auctions. Pop band
Temposhark, whose lead singer collects Emin's art, named their debut album
The Invisible Line, inspired by passages from Emin's book
Exploration of The Soul. Rock legend
Ronnie Wood of the
Rolling Stones is a well documented friend of Emin, whose own paintings are inspired by Emin's work. Emin was invited to
Madonna's country estate Ashcombe. The singer described Emin, saying: "Tracey is intelligent and wounded and not afraid to expose herself," and, "She is provocative but she has something to say. I can relate to that."
David Bowie, a childhood inspiration of Emin's, also became friends with the artist. Bowie once described Emin as "William Blake as a woman, written by
Mike Leigh". Like the
George Michael and
Kenny Goss neon, Emin created a unique neon work for her supermodel friend
Kate Moss called
Moss Kin. In 2004, it was reported that this unique piece had been discovered dumped in a skip in east London. The piece, consisting of neon tubing spelling the words
Moss Kin, had been mistakenly thrown out of a basement, owned by the craftsman who made the glass. The artwork was never collected by Moss and had therefore been stored for three years in the basement of a specialist artist used by Emin in the Spitalfields area. It was accidentally dumped when the craftsman moved. The term used in the work
Kin is a recurring theme of Emin's to describe those dear to her, her loved ones. Other examples can be seen in a monoprint called
MatKin dedicated to her then boyfriend artist
Mat Collishaw and released as an
aquatint limited edition in 1997. Emin created a nude drawing of
Kate Moss known as
Kate (2000), signed and dated
1 February 2000 in pencil. In 2006, the same image was released as a limited edition etching, but renamed as
Kate Moss 2000 (2006). Emin's work was included in the 2022 exhibition
Women Painting Women at the
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.
Stuckism Emin's relationship with the artist and musician
Billy Childish led to the name of the
Stuckism movement in 1999. Childish, who had mocked her new affiliation to conceptualism in the early 1990s, was told by Emin, "Your paintings are stuck, you are stuck! – Stuck! Stuck! Stuck!" (that is, stuck in the past for not accepting the YBA approach to art). He recorded the incident in the poem, "Poem for a Pissed Off Wife" published in
Big Hart and Balls Hangman Books 1994, from which
Charles Thomson, who knew them both, later coined the term Stuckism. Emin and Childish had remained on friendly terms up until 1999, but the activities of the Stuckist group offended her and caused a lasting rift with Childish. In a 2003 interview, when she was asked about the Stuckists, she said: Childish left the Stuckist movement in 2001.
Modern Art Oxford (2002–03) From November 2002 to January 2003, Tracey Emin's solo exhibition
This Is Another Place was held at
Modern Art Oxford and marked the museum's reopening and renaming to Modern Art Oxford. The exhibition was Emin's first British exhibition since 1997. and sculptures including a large-scale wooden pier, called
Knowing My Enemy,
Momart fire (2004) On 24 May 2004, a fire in a
Momart storage warehouse in East London destroyed many works from the
Saatchi collection, including Emin's famous tent with appliquéd letters,
Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963–1995 ("The Tent") (1995) and ''The Last Thing I Said To You Is Don't Leave Me Here'' ("The Hut") (1999), Emin's blue wooden beach hut that she bought with fellow artist
Sarah Lucas and shared with her boyfriend of the time, the gallerist
Carl Freedman. Emin spoke out angrily against what she perceived as a general public lack of sympathy, and even amusement, at the loss of the artworks in the fire.
Venice Biennale (2007) In August 2006, the
British Council announced that they had chosen Emin to produce a show of new and past works for the
British Pavilion at the 52nd
Venice Biennale in 2007. Emin was the second woman to produce a solo show for the UK at the Biennale, following
Rachel Whiteread in 1997. Andrea Rose, the commissioner for the British Pavilion, stated that the exhibition would allow Emin's work to be viewed "in an international context and at a distance from the YBA generation with which she came to prominence". Emin picked the title
Borrowed Light for the exhibition. She produced new work especially for the British Pavilion, using a wide variety of media, from needlework, photography and video to drawing, painting, sculpture and neon. A promotional
British Council flyer included an image of a previously unseen monoprint for the exhibition called
Fat Minge (1994) that was included in the show, while the
Telegraph newspaper featured a photo of a new purple neon
Legs I (2007) that was on display (directly inspired by Emin's 2004 purple watercolour
Purple Virgin series). Emin summed up her Biennale exhibition work as "Pretty and hard-core". Emin was interviewed about the Venice Biennale by the BBC's
Kirsty Wark in November 2006. Emin showed Wark some work-in-progress, which included large-scale canvases with paintings of Emin's legs and vagina. Starting with the
Purple Virgin (2004) acrylic watercolour series with their strong purple brush strokes depicting Emin's naked open legs, leading to Emin's paintings in 2005-2006 such as
Asleep Alone With Legs Open (2005), the
Reincarnation (2005) series and
Masturbating (2006) amongst others. These works were a significant new development in her artistic output. Andrea Rose, the British Pavilion commissioner, added to this, commenting on the art Emin has produced, saying: "It's remarkably ladylike. There is no ladette work – no toilet with a poo in it – and actually it is very mature I think, quite lovely. She is much more interested in formal values than people might expect, and it shows in this exhibition. It's been revelatory working with her. Tracey's reputation for doing shows and hanging them is not good, but she's been a dream to work with. What it shows is that she's moved a long way away from the YBAs. She's quite a lady actually!"
Royal Academician (2007) On 29 March 2007, Tracey Emin was made a Royal Academician by the
Royal Academy of Arts. In becoming a member of the Royal Academy Emin joined an elite group of artists that includes
David Hockney,
Peter Blake,
Anthony Caro and
Alison Wilding. Her Academician status entitles Emin to exhibit up to six works in the annual summer exhibition. Emin had previously been invited to include works at the
Royal Academy Summer Exhibitions in 2001, then again from 2004-2007. For 2004's Summer Exhibition, Emin was chosen by fellow artist David Hockney to submit two monoprints, one called ''And I'd Love To Be The One'' (1997), and another on the topic of Emin's abortion called
Ripped Up (1995), as that year's theme celebrated the art of drawing as part of the creative process. 2007 saw Emin exhibit a neon work called
Angel (2005). Her art was first exhibited at the Royal Academy as part of the
Sensation exhibition in 1997. For the June 2008 Summer Exhibition, Emin was invited to
curate a gallery. Emin also gave a public talk in June 2008. Interviewed by art critic and broadcaster
Matthew Collings, discussion focused on her role within the Royal Academy and the Academy's relationship to the contemporary art world, and her perspective, as an artist, on hanging and curating a gallery in the Summer Exhibition. She exhibited her famous
Space Monkey – We Have Lift Off print at the 2009 Royal Academy Summer Exhibition.
Twenty Years retrospective (2008) The first major retrospective of Emin's work was held in
Edinburgh between August and November 2008 attracting over 40,000 visitors, breaking the
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art's record for an exhibition of work by a living artist. The large-scale exhibition included the full range of Emin's art from the rarely seen early work to the iconic
My Bed (1998) and the room-sized installation
Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made (1996). The show displayed her unique appliquéd blankets, paintings, sculptures, films, neons, drawings and monoprints. The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art was the only UK venue for the show which then went to the
Centro de Arte Contemporáneo in Málaga, Spain, and then to the
Kunstmuseum in Bern, Switzerland from 2009. It was reported on 6 November 2008 that Emin gifted a major sculpture to the
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art as a "thank you" to both the gallery and the city of Edinburgh. The work
Roman Standard (2005) comprises a bronze pole, surmounted by a little bird, cast in bronze. The work has an estimated value of at least £75,000. revealing facets of the artist and her work that are frequently overlooked. The exhibition included painting, drawing, photography, textiles, video and sculpture, with rarely before seen early works alongside more recent large-scale installations. Emin made a new series of outdoor sculptures especially for this solo show.
The Vanishing Lake – Frieze Fair (2011) On 6 October 2011, Emin opened a site-specific exhibition at a Georgian house on
Fitzroy Square. The title is taken from her novel which has served as a catalyst for a series of works, created for a neoclassical house designed by
Robert Adam in 1794. The exhibition also featured a series of embroidered texts and hand-woven tapestries which continued Emin's interest in domestic and handcrafted traditions. Emin herself has said, "I called it that because I saw part of myself as drying and not there anymore and I wanted to question the whole idea of love and passion, whether love exists anymore...Why? Because I'm nearly 50, I'm single, because I don't have children." She also produced a poster and limited edition print for the
London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games, one of only 12 British artists selected. On 19 July 2012, Emin carried the
Olympic torch through her hometown of Margate.
Joint exhibit with Edvard Munch In December 2020, Emin had a gallery exhibition containing works by
Edvard Munch, entitled
The Loneliness of the Soul, at the Royal Academy of Arts. Emin selected 19 pieces of Munch's work to be displayed alongside 25 pieces of her own. Simultaneously, she had a show at London's
White Cube gallery which included a short
Super-8 film in tribute to Munch. The exhibition was re-shown at the newly opened
Munch Museum in Oslo, with Emin being the first artist to show alongside the Norwegian painter. Works included recent paintings, as well as her seminal work
My Bed. Emin had suffered from cancer the year before the exhibit and was unsure whether she would be able to see it herself. The exhibition travelled to the
Royal Academy of Arts in London in 2021. Reviewing the exhibition for
Londonist, Tabish Khan said: "It captures that sense of loneliness I've struggled to put into words, and left me emotionally spent". It was also reviewed favourably in
The Guardian with Tim Adams writing "This exhibition is not comprehensive enough to be billed as a retrospective, but even so, everything that Emin has made and felt and suffered in the past is brought to full expression in it".
By The Time You See Me There Will Be Nothing Left (2024) An exhibition of Emin's work produced post-cancer diagnosis ran from 24 May 2024 until 27 July. The show included
You Keep Fucking Me and was held in the
Xavier Hufkens gallery in Brussels. She told
The Guardian: "It's the best show I have ever done."
Tracey Emin: A Second Life (2026) From 27 February to 31 August 2026, the
Tate Modern will be exhibiting
Tracey Emin: A Second Life, that traces her career over forty years through various media and displaying previously undisplayed works. ==Artistic work==