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Rachel Wolff

Has Tracey Emin Gone Soft?

Britain’s onetime bad girl is mellowing with age. On the eve of a bold new show, she talks to Rachel Wolff about making peace with critics, and her legendary sex drive. VIEW OUR GALLERY.

When Tracey Emin introduced herself, she was soft-spoken, almost demure—it wasn’t exactly the British bad-girl artist I was expecting. “Hi, I’m Tracey,” she said with a smile. Then she fixed herself a cup of tea. Her hair was pulled back; she was wearing a gray fleece pullover, blue jeans, and sneakers (not “Chucks” or old school Pumas, but the kind you put on expressly for the gym). She sat down at the front desk of Lehmann Maupin’s Lower East Side gallery, where her solo show of new work is up through December 19, her pant leg inched up, revealing socks with cartoon cats and hearts printed on them.

Emin seemed pleasant, tepidly confident, and, dare I say, even a tad uncool—but in a good way. It was hard to believe that this is the same artist who has spent much of her career associated with terms like “wild child,” “provocateur,” “diva,” and “enfant terrible.” And these titles weren’t exactly undeserved. Emin palled around with Kate Moss, spending nights on the town that would make Amy Winehouse blush; she once caused a drunken scene on live TV after the 1997 Turner Prize awards dinner; and her artistic oeuvre includes a urine-soaked bed, watercolors inspired by her own abortions, and a tent in which she stitched the names of all her past lovers.

And yet, Emin seems to have truly mellowed—she notes at least twice that she’s pushing 50—and her latest work has, in a sense, too. She’s focusing on line quality and has returned almost exclusively to sewing and drawing. She’s happy with the new pieces; she feels like she’s getting back to her roots, so to speak—something she attributes to the process of planning her recent career retrospective, Tracey Emin: 20 Years, which made two European stops last year.

“It’s like Rudi Fuchs, this art historian said to me, ‘Be more bleak with your salty line; use your salty, salty line,’” Emin says. “It’s such a sexy thing—it’s brilliant. And I think now that’s what I’m doing much more. It’s like the difference between a woman with a really angular, strong face and a very pretty, sort of Brigitte Bardot. I’m never going to be the pretty girl. And that’s what was needed in my work—for that to come out and for it to become more angular, more intense, like I am. Plus we’ve got this massive recession on, so it’s like I’ve got nothing to lose.”

But even “mellow” is a relative word when it comes to Emin. Her work is still hyper-sexual (and hyper-personal, for that matter). But the neons, drawings, embroideries, sculptures, and film on view at Lehmann Maupin feel quiet and introspective, much like Emin herself these days.

Click Image Below to View Our Gallery

Article  - Wolff Tracey Emin GALLERY LAUNCH

The artist is showing large- and small-scale hand-sewn embroideries on the gallery’s second floor. They depict women from the neck down, mostly, in various stages of self-pleasuring with Emin’s distinct scrawl stitched banner-like above and below. (“More ugly—More self—More mirror—No more inside—Just fear—More fear,” reads one; “No Not Right Now,” begs another). A video projection downstairs animates this imagery to squirm-inducing effects. Emin confesses that while the animation is based on her body, it’s not her masturbating, per se: “I wish it was,” she says, almost somberly. “I’m approaching 50 and my sex drive is not what it used to be.”

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November 5, 2009 | 11:17pm
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This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.

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10:20 am, Nov 8, 2009

JackHughes

Celebrity "art."

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10:44 am, Nov 8, 2009

This comment has been removed by The Daily Beast's editors.

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8:18 pm, Nov 8, 2009

OffenbachStutz

Etant donnes!

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9:22 pm, Nov 8, 2009

voteforgoat

what's shown is not bad.

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9:45 pm, Nov 8, 2009

T1Brit

From personal experience I can confirm that the personality of this artist is in perfect sympathy with her work - they are both trash

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8:16 am, Nov 9, 2009

Dolmance

One of the worst ten people I've ever met.

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10:15 am, Nov 9, 2009

angelamdupont

I agree. And the actual talent of the artist is horrible. If you want to show crappy porn do it on a porn site.

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12:43 pm, Nov 9, 2009

Dolmance

My introduction to Tracey Emin came in a single evening about five years ago - I went to her studio and saw her her work for the first time, had dinner with the woman and a few of her hangers on, then went back to her studio to spend several hours watching one of the most hateful and unattractive human beings I've ever met in my life snort coke and abuse people, mostly by accusing them of being homosexuals.

I also found her art, at that time in her career at least, amateurish and inspired entirely by an explicit obsession with being sodomized. Ugh.

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10:15 am, Nov 9, 2009

SkinTheGoat

what's shown is not good.

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12:14 pm, Nov 9, 2009

Cyclemanjohn

This is trash...

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6:55 pm, Nov 10, 2009

yogchick

Talk about the Emporer's New Clothes. This stuff is just self-indulgent, self-important, self-centered dross. The fact that she's so easy to imitate makes me wonder why it hasn't happened yet.

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7:11 pm, Nov 10, 2009
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Has Tracey Emin Gone Soft?

by Rachel Wolff

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