

Women and Art - Tracey Emin
1963 in London, England: lives and works in London.
More legends have probably sprung up around Tracey Emin than around any other artist who emerged on the scene in the 1990s under the Young British Art label. Stories of her school dropout, precarious jobs, wild sex life, and all the attendant traumas—such as losing her virginity at 13 in what was effectively a rape—appeared everywhere, not just in art magazines. Readers and viewers were informed of stillbirths, alcohol abuse, and scandalous television appearances. These tales of lust and pain were fueled by Tracey Emin's own art, a merciless exploitation of her own biography, whose seemingly exhibitionistic immediacy can be shocking. The viewer becomes an unwitting voyeur who can satisfy their desire for the sensational in a way otherwise only afforded by the mass media; But Tracey Emin can also provide something that the mass media cannot, as a closer examination of her art reveals a poetic and precisely defined world, evidently authentic, capable of projecting a person into their own life and problems. The individual and the universal, the intimate and the public, are continually intertwined in Tracey Emin's work. Within this force field, the artist manages to engage in a compelling discourse on emotions and desires that encourages the viewer and their aspirations to return to the otherwise arid, academic, and "reified" world of art. It is precisely here that the political aspect of Tracey Emin's art lies. The way in which certain events in her biography are connected to the experience, memory, and current concerns of the community is revealed in Everyone I Have Ever Slept With From 1963-1995. Tracey Emin covered the inside walls of a small igloo tent with colorful cut-out letters that spelled out the names of those who had shared her bed over the years.



