Friday, February 27, 2026

6 Boundary-Breaking Artworks in Tracey Emin’s Major London Show https://ift.tt/3Vjwatc

For decades, Dame Tracey Emin has produced raw meditations on abortion, rape, alcoholism, disability, death, love, strength, and perseverance. Her confessional artmaking has garnered both praise and rage. The installation My Bed (1998)—which features the British artist’s own soiled bed with crumpled sheets, used condom wrappers, and liquor bottles—compelled a South Wales housewife to drive 200 miles to London and rush at the work with cleaning supplies. She later told The Daily Mail: “Tracey is setting a bad example to young women.”

The art world labeled Emin an “enfant terrible” in the 1990s as she experienced a meteoric rise to infamy with the Young British Artists, a loose group of London-based artists who sensationalized the British scene. The artist labeled herself “Mad Tracey from Margate.” Drama continued, and in 2020, she survived a near-deadly battle with cancer. Four years later, King Charles III made her a dame in recognition of her service to British art. The public, it seems, has finally caught up with Emin.

Now, the artist’s retrospective, the largest-ever survey of her career, has arrived at Tate Modern. “A Second Life,” curated by director Maria Balshaw, is on view through August 31st. It features over 90 works spanning 40 years, including key pieces shown for the first time. A massive white box where Emin painted non-stop for three weeks is on view, as well as towering feminist textiles and blood-red paintings that document Emin’s grief following her mother’s death.

A fighting spirit runs through Emin’s oeuvre. “Art is a vocation in life,” she told the BBC last year. “It’s something you feel you have to do, and you can’t stop yourself from doing it.”

Here, Artsy highlights essential works that reveal the depth of Emin’s legendary career.


Why I Never Became a Dancer (1995)

This film, shot with grainy Super 8 film, captures the seaside town of Margate, England. Seagulls fly along the beach, people play games in the local arcade, and Emin recalls the events of the late 1970s that led her to leave for London at age 15. The artist speaks of sex, often with older men, and a brief stint in dance competitions. Emin was mid-routine at the 1978 British Disco Dance Championship when a group of men she’d slept with began chanting “slag.” She ran offstage and out of the building. It’s a memory tinged with both shame and liberation. In the film’s final minutes, the artist identifies the men by name. She appears onscreen in a dance studio, smiling and twirling to Sylvester’s “You Make Me Feel (Mighty Real).”

The nearly seven-minute film is often overshadowed by Everyone I Have Ever Slept With 1963–1995 (1995), a thematically concurrent but far more critically lauded work that helped launch Emin’s career. While the installation featured the names of everyone she’d shared a bed with—sexually or platonically—stitched into the fabric of a tent, Why I Never Became A Dancer is more direct: Emin forcefully reclaims her own narrative and vocalizes how her early sexual encounters made her feel. “There were no morals or rules or judgments. I just did what I wanted to do,” she recalls in a voiceover. “Sex for me had been an adventure, a learning. I was the innocent.”

The work confirmed Emin’s uncompromising, autobiographical approach as well as Margate’s formative pull. It cleared the way for her eventual return home in 2017, nearly four decades later.


Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made (1996)

Six years after a nearly fatal abortion led her to stop painting, Emin entered a large white box in Stockholm’s Galleri Andreas Brändström completely naked and got to work. For three and a half weeks, she prowled the room, viewable only through fisheye lenses embedded in the walls. She smoked, drank, called friends, and worked through the trauma she’d come to associate with painting. Complications from her procedure, including blood poisoning, deepened this association and turned painting into a source of revulsion. “Every time I smelt turps or oil paint, this repugnant fear and loathing of myself and a really massive sense of failure came back,” she recalled in a 2024 interview with White Cube. The performance helped the artist shake her anxieties about the medium.

Visitors flocked to the gallery to watch Emin create works that referenced the styles of Egon Schiele, Pablo Picasso, Piet Mondrian, and Yves Klein. While she intended to drag the paintings into the snowy courtyard and burn them, the gallerist intervened to preserve the room and enshrine its legacy. Thirty years later, the nearly one hundred paintings and drawings, as well as the bed, radio, CDs, magazines, and kitchen utensils she used, have been restaged in the Tate. The work is more than a snapshot of the creative process or testament to her resilience: The performance collapsed the boundary between private catharsis and public spectacle, establishing radical self-exposure as a key facet of Emin’s practice.


My Bed (1998)

Emin’s famed diaristic installation My Bed (1998) functions as a still life of emotional unraveling. It features the artist’s imported bed along with its tangled, stained sheets and a rug strewn with what one critic called “uncomfortably personal debris”—of sex, drink, smoking, and other vices.

It first appeared at Tokyo’s Sagacho Exhibition Space and New York’s Lehmann Maupin gallery before entering the 1999 Turner Prize group show at Tate Britain—and setting off a media furor.

Art critics tore into the work, with The Guardian’s Adrian Searle lambasting it as “tortured nonsense” and The Herald’s Clare Henry calling Emin a “silly show-off screaming for attention.” Despite the controversy, Emin’s Tate installation became a career-defining moment that raised her international profile. The feminist work offered a frank depiction of depression, shattering taboos around mental health and female sexuality.

The work now feels prescient. “Bed rotting” has become romanticized, and an imitation of Emin’s bed recently appeared as a set piece in And Just Like That, the Sex and the City sequel series. “Much has changed since the days when David Frost could not bring himself to mention the word tampon on breakfast TV for fear of upsetting viewers,” Balshaw told Artsy. “Emin says these days people look at the bed with tenderness, rather than shock.”


The Last of the Gold (2002)

This monumental quilted blanket, measuring nearly 10-feet tall, is Emin’s largest textile to date. The title refers to the materials: repurposed remnants of a gold curtain the artist’s mother hung in her childhood home. The bottom half includes 26 handwritten notes by the artist detailing the “A to Z of abortion,” from the literal to emotional cost of the procedure. “You may feel in a state of euphoria from the relief, be careful as depression may follow,” one warns.

The piece is on public view for the first time since its 2002 debut at Lehmann Maupin in New York. “It offers a very early example of her ethics of care for others, which was at odds with how she was portrayed in the media and art history in the early 2000s,” Balshaw said. While critics like Searle ripped the “neon shouting” of her series of neon signs produced during this period—featuring phrases like “Fuck off and die, you slag”—her quieter, more empathetic embroideries went largely unappreciated.

Textiles are key to Emin’s oeuvre, and this work is both an ode to her own abortion and a manifesto for women going through the same process. Emin has said she wishes she’d had something similar as a young woman; the work is still just as urgent today, as reproductive rights are rolled back worldwide.


I was too young to be carrying your Ashes (2017–18)

British journalist Lynn Barber once said of Emin that “if a wound shows any signs of healing, she’ll pick the scab until it starts bleeding again,” that while it may have offered a boon to her art, “it must be quite a drawback in her life.” Those wounds resurface in this painting, made after the death of Emin’s mother in 2016 from squamous cell bladder cancer—the same illness that nearly took the artist’s life a few years later.

In the work, vivid blood-red brushstrokes run down the canvas, staining a figure, a stand-in for the artist, who clutches a box of ashes. The streaks of pigment are charged with movement and rage. The painting anchors the exhibition’s second half, as “Second Life” turns toward reflection and spiritual reckoning. Emin transmuted her grief into propulsive new work, laying the foundation for subsequent pieces that explored transcendence and self-care.


I Followed You To The End (2024)

When a cancer diagnosis and major surgeries removed her bladder and other organs in 2020, Emin’s defining artistic relationship to her body shifted yet again. This monumental bronze sculpture gives the reconfiguration physical form. Sprawled legs ground the work as hips rise into the air; the position straddles the line between vulnerability and cheeky defiance.

The work appears outside the Tate, visible for all passersby. Its public placement mirrors the artist’s own transformation from “enfant terrible” to nurturing elder arts leader: In 2023, she founded the Tracey Emin Foundation in a former bathhouse and mortuary. The program offers professional studio spaces for 14-month artist residencies. “When you’ve been seriously ill and you come out the other side, you really don’t fuck around anymore, ever,” she told Jerry Saltz in 2023.

For Balshaw, this sculpture and its companion piece—a large-scale painting of the same name—provide a throughline for the exhibition: “Each [piece] speaks to Emin’s great subject: love and its loss,” she said. “Love is an ecstasy that becomes almost religious in many recent works, and it nearly always tips into pain, as love and loss are bound together.”



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/MLHpT9E

The 10 Best Booths at Frieze Los Angeles 2026 https://ift.tt/KbdfD1h

The 2026 edition of Frieze Los Angeles opened once again at the Santa Monica Airport on Thursday, February 26, with a mood befitting the city’s art scene: relaxed, convivial, and spirited.

If there were any opening-day anxieties, they centered more on missed celebrity sightings than on sales. From 10 a.m., VIPs streamed steadily into the tent, and by late afternoon, the aisles were bustling.

For its seventh L.A. edition, the fair brings together 95 galleries from 22 countries and has settled into the rhythm of its host city—most visibly in its commitment to the local arts community. “Los Angeles thrives on experimentation and artist-led practice, yet its defining strength is the enduring, interconnected community of artists, curators, collectors, and institutions who show up for one another across generations,” said Frieze Americas director Christine Messineo.

That civic focus carried particular weight in the wake of last year’s devastating wildfires. This year saw the debut of the Frieze Library, a response to the 2025 Palisades fire that invites galleries to donate publications to the newly reopened Pacific Palisades Library.

Across the fair, works by Los Angeles–based artists and presentations mined the region’s histories, geographies, and iconography. And in true L.A. fashion, celebrities were never far from view. Actors Christoph Waltz, Emma Watson, and François Arnaud, as well as NFL legend Joe Montana, were spotted browsing the art. “It’s just fun,” Montana told Artsy. “I’m just starting to see everybody’s iterations of what they love and what they love to do.”

Initial sales reports from galleries appeared to confirm a solid start to proceedings. Transactions on the day were led by a mixed-media work by Njideka Akunyili Crosby for $2.8 million at David Zwirner’s booth. Those sales are available in our first-day sales report from the fair—check back on Monday for our more extensive recap.

Here, we present our 10 best booths from the fair.


Superposition

Booth F2

With works by Greg Ito

Home is a Feeling, 2026
Greg Ito
Superposition

Radiating from its corner in the Frieze Focus section—reserved for galleries 12 years old or younger—nomadic gallery Superposition’s presentation of Los Angeles artist Greg Ito drew sustained crowds throughout VIP day.

A fourth-generation Japanese American who grew up minutes from the fairgrounds, Ito centers the booth with a vintage black trunk bearing his great-grandfather’s initials. Used to carry family belongings during their forced incarceration in World War II, that trunk serves as the emotional and conceptual core of the installation, titled “A Cautionary Tale.” Vermilion suitcases cluster against vivid yellow walls and carpeting, accompanied by crisp, graphic paintings of similar cases. Some can be opened, revealing small paintings alongside intimate objects—childhood rock collections, inherited keepsakes, drawings made with his daughter. Each becomes a portable treasure chest, assembling a sense of identity through personal touchstones.

“‘A Cautionary Tale’ directly aligns with the gallery’s nomadic model and its ongoing focus on stories shaped by displacement,” said Superposition founder Storm Ascher. “The project centers objects designed to move—suitcases, trunks, containers—as structural parallels to the gallery’s own mobility across cities and contexts. Rather than presenting the booth as a fixed display, the installation operates as a temporary site, emphasizing how histories formed through migration and rupture surface most clearly in spaces that are temporary.”

Southern Guild

Booth A12

With works by Shane Keisuke Berkery, Kamyar Bineshtarigh, Sandra Brewster, Chloe Chiasson, Jozua Gerrard, Anique Jordan, Bonolo Kavula, Lebohang Kganye, Manyaku Mashilo, Roméo Mivekannin, Gus Monday, Zanele Muholi, Mmangaliso Nzuza, Wura-Natasha Ogunji, Zizipho Poswa, Marcus Leslie Singleton, Jasmine Thomas-Girvan, and Chidy Wayne.

Vika II, small, The Decks, Cape Town, 2019
Zanele Muholi
Southern Guild

Mam'uNoSayini, 2023
Zizipho Poswa
Southern Guild

Abidjan In Golden Evening Air, 2025
Marcus Leslie Singleton
Southern Guild

Lonesome Lonestar, 2024
Chloe Chiasson
Southern Guild

Khat-Khati XV, 2025
Kamyar Bineshtarigh
Southern Guild

Mise-en-scène at Canyon de Chelly', 2025
Shane Keisuke Berkery
Southern Guild

South African gallery Southern Guild presents a multigenerational, cross-continental booth at a pivotal moment, as it prepares to open a New York space later this year—an emphatic display of the range of its tastemaking artists.

Spanning figuration, sculpture, photography, and material experimentation, the presentation unites artists across continents and eras through shared concerns including identity, inheritance, spirituality, visibility, and the body. “These are people located on different continents and from different eras, and yet there’s this coming together of common themes,” said founder Trevyn Gowan.

Standouts include Zanele Muholi’s rigorously composed portraits confronting race and gender, and Zizipho Poswa’s ceramic and bronze sculptures that translate Xhosa adornment into commanding, totemic forms. Relief works by Chloe Chiasson and narrative paintings by Marcus Leslie Singleton probe intimacy and queer identity, while Kamyar Bineshtarigh reframes a former studio wall as a historical record. The booth also introduces artists the gallery has recently begun working with, such as Gus Monday and Shane Keisuke Berkery, whose surreal visions of the Wild West resonated with Angelenos in attendance.


Casemore Gallery and Yancey Richardson Gallery

Booth A27

With works by Larry Sultan

Boxers, Mission Hills, 1999
Larry Sultan
Yancey Richardson Gallery

Sharon Wild, 2001
Larry Sultan
Casemore Gallery

Woman in Curlers, 2002
Larry Sultan
Yancey Richardson Gallery

Tasha's Third Film, 1998
Larry Sultan
Casemore Gallery

Pool, Calabasas, 2002
Larry Sultan
Yancey Richardson Gallery

Kitchen, Santa Clarita, 2001
Larry Sultan
Casemore Gallery

San Francisco’s Casemore Gallery and New York’s Yancey Richardson Gallery present a distinctly Californian booth focusing on Larry Sultan’s 1998–2003 series “The Valley (1998–2003),” his meditation on the undercurrents in American suburbia at the turn of the millennium.

The photographs displayed here examine the unexpected overlap between California’s adult film industry and the manicured neighborhoods of the San Fernando Valley in Los Angeles. This marks the first time the body of work has been shown in Los Angeles since Sultan’s 2014 retrospective at LACMA.

“Larry is considered more and more an important figure in the history of photography, and incredibly influential on a younger generation of photographers,” said Yancey Richardson. “We felt like it would be a good time to show it at Frieze. There’s a connection between this body of work and reality TV, celebrity, and social media.”

Raised in the Valley, Sultan later returned to explore the lesser-known uses of its cookie-cutter homes and sunlit neighborhoods. In his photos, he documents the rented domestic interiors—complete with family portraits, plush sofas, and backyard patio furniture—that become temporary pornographic film sets. Rather than foregrounding the spectacle shown in these films, Sultan lingers on the moments before and after, allowing architecture and atmosphere to take center stage.


David Zwirner

Booth D3

With works by Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Noah Davis, Roy DeCarava, Philip-Lorca diCorcia, Louis Fratino, Martin Kippenberger, Emma McIntyre, Raymond Pettibon, Walter Price, Steven Shearer, Wolfgang Tillmans, and Lisa Yuskavage.

Ale in Liguria, 2025
Louis Fratino
David Zwirner

Manchurian lilac, 2025
Louis Fratino
David Zwirner

Ralph Smith, 21 years old, Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, $25, 1990-1992
Philip-Lorca diCorcia
David Zwirner

Major Tom, 20 years old, Kansas City, Kansas, $20, 1990-1992
Philip-Lorca diCorcia
David Zwirner

In one of the year’s most talked-about new artist representations, painter Louis Fratino joined David Zwirner earlier this month. And here, the artist debuts a new suite of paintings with his new gallery. The canvases dwell on moments of solitude and intimacy: male figures at rest or embracing one another, rendered in dusty aquas, terracottas, and softened greens that infuse the scenes with warmth and vulnerability.

Set within a tightly curated selection of historical and contemporary voices, Fratino’s works form the emotional core of the gallery’s presentation, which brings together many of its leading names.

Highlights include Noah Davis’s tender figurative works and Walter Price’s psychologically charged interior scenes, alongside Roy DeCarava’s moody photographs of Los Angeles and a characteristically irreverent Martin Kippenberger painting of a rabid guitarist. Standout works by Njideka Akunyili Crosby,

Emma McIntyre, and Lisa Yuskavage round out this cohesive and expansive presentation.


Anthony Gallery

Booth F03

With works by Andrew J. Park

Anthony Gallery’s Frieze debut with Andrew J. Park is a sharp meditation on memory, media, and the instability of perception. Titled “Almost Real,” the presentation features airbrushed paintings that channel the hazy glow of 1990s television and early analog gaming into intimate yet estranged images.

Park begins with these nostalgic references, then filters them through AI image generators. The machine-made outputs become scaffolding for his compositions, subtly warping perspective, anatomy, and atmosphere.

“I can generate the exact kind of reference I’m looking for,” the artist told Artsy. “[But] there are a lot of happy accidents that happen.”

The resulting works are distorted yet recognizable. Familiar fragments—eyes, noses, machine parts—are layered until they dissolve into off-kilter yet still faintly legible images: a face, for instance, emerges from an amalgamation of blurry imagery.


Carvalho

Booth C03

With works by Élise Peroi

Les reflets de janvier, 2026
Elise Peroi
Carvalho

Au seuil du printemps II, 2026
Elise Peroi
Carvalho

Au seuil du printemps I, 2026
Elise Peroi
Carvalho

Onde fleurie, 2025
Elise Peroi
Carvalho

L'ocre du vent VI, 2025-26
Elise Peroi
Carvalho

This presentation is a major moment for Artsy Vanguard 2026 alum Élise Peroi and her New York gallery Carvalho, marking both Peroi’s first exhibition in Los Angeles and the gallery’s debut at Frieze L.A.

It’s a striking introduction. Anchored by a monumental textile installation, the booth demonstrates Peroi’s poetic inquiry into landscape, language, and impermanence through a practice that fuses painting, weaving, and architecture.

Built on wooden frames and woven with strips cut from her own silk paintings, the panels create architectural dividers. Light passes through their translucent surfaces, evoking a forest-like atmosphere of sun through branches.

“For this seminal installation, Peroi depicts the flora and fauna of the Southern California landscape before meticulously deconstructing her gouache-on-silk paintings,” said gallery founder Jennifer Carvalho. “She then reconfigures them on the loom, creating translucent veils through which light and air pass. The work not only harnesses the atmosphere of Frieze’s tent, but is also deeply tied to time and place.”


Hauser & Wirth

Booth C11

With works by Conny Maier

Blaue Schale mit Orangen (Citrus Greening), 2025
Conny Maier
Hauser & Wirth

Vogel mit Mensch, 2025
Conny Maier
Hauser & Wirth

Orangenernte, 2025
Conny Maier
Hauser & Wirth

California Dreaming, 2025
Conny Maier
Hauser & Wirth

Harvesting, 2025
Conny Maier
Hauser & Wirth

Hauser & Wirth’s solo presentation of new paintings by German artist Conny Maier, entitled “Dust Bowl” is an exceptional body of work depicting scenes of orange farming and agricultural life.

The title evokes the ecological disaster of the 1930s, when dust storms displaced hundreds of thousands across the American West. Rather than illustrating this history directly, Maier depicts its moral and emotional layers. Her depictions of these figures harvesting are set in strangely dystopian environments.

The canvases pulse with saturated color and lush detail, yet carry a quiet tension. In California Dreaming (2025), three figures are pressed into a mound of oversized, cloudlike blue forms that might be sacks of fruit, their arms pushing through the piles that cover them. The shapes appear plush and plentiful, but the bodies seem compressed, suggesting a world where labor and landscape are physically and inextricably entwined.

The works were clearly making an impression on those in attendance: “The welcome on this first day has been incredibly warm: all the works in her solo presentation on our stand were placed,” said the gallery’s president, Marc Payot.


Nara Roesler

Booth C2

With works by Carlos Bunga, Maria Klabin, Lucia Koch, Karin Lambrecht, Vik Muniz, Tomie Ohtake, and Sérgio Sister, Amelia Toledo, Laura Vinci.

After 2, 2025
Maria Klabin
Nara Roesler

Yesterday, 2023
Maria Klabin
Nara Roesler

Branch of Lemons, after Claude Monet, 2025
Vik Muniz
Nara Roesler

Botanical garden, 2025
Maria Klabin
Nara Roesler

Loose leaves # 06, 2025
Laura Vinci
Nara Roesler

Nara Roesler’s excellent presentation presents a multigenerational dialogue between Brazil’s modernist legacy and contemporary voices.

Maria Klabin foregrounds the presentation with a suite of recent oils, ranging from intimate canvases to the expansive Blue (2025), a large, luminous depiction of a sleeping figure.

Material transformation emerges as a central thread to the practices on view here. Manoela Medeiros’s textured still lifes incorporate mineral pigment and excavation, while Laura Vinci’s brass and steel sculptures, including the monumental Quebra-Galho (2025), balance industrial weight with organic delicacy. Vik Muniz, one of Brazil’s best-known artists, presents two art-historical reconfigurations—Branch of Lemons, after Claude Monet (2025) and Mahana no Atua (Day of the Gods), after Gauguin (2006)—transforming canonical motifs into richly textured compositions.

Nearby, works by Tomie Ohtake and Sérgio Sister underscore the enduring vitality of geometric abstraction, while Karin Lambrecht’s resin- and copper-inflected surface introduces a spiritual chromatic intensity

Taken together, the booth affirms the gallery’s commitment to cross-generational exchange within its program.


El Apartamento

Booth D11

With works by Miki Leal

Spanish artist Miki Leal’s exuberant large-scale paintings at Havana and Madrid gallery El Apartamento draw on pop culture, design, and art history. Immediately grabbing attention is a large canvas that portrays Henri Matisse’s iconic La Danse (1910) displayed at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. In the foreground, elegantly dressed gallery-goers stand before the iconic scene, contemplating it. This painting-within-a-painting questions how we look at historical masterpieces.

This interplay between past and present runs throughout Leal’s work. Elsewhere, figures inhabit airy interiors and balconies overlooking the sea; a pair of men in tennis whites lingers courtside; domestic spaces open onto lush, tessellated landscapes. Leal renders them in a flattened, graphic style that recalls David Hockney’s crisp depictions, while remaining rooted in his own visual language.

Pattern and geometry structure the compositions, drawing on Andalusian tiles, mosaics, and the graphics of Iberian modernism, to create a vivid sense of place that is color-drenched and unmistakably Spanish. “He turns them into something unique, mixing it with abstractionism and also incorporating part of Spanish culture and architecture,” a gallery staffer said.

At the center of the booth stands a ceramic urn in stark black-and-white, its handles formed by sculpted animal heads. Evoking ancient Greek pottery, it introduces another art-historical thread. With paintings that quote Matisse and evoke modern leisure, the booth shows the artist’s interest in creating an artistic dialogue across centuries.


Olney Gleason

Booth A9

With works by Kour Pour and Bosco Sodi

Blue Traveler, 2025-2026
Kour Pour
Olney Gleason

Untitled, 2023
Bosco Sodi
Olney Gleason

Misty Mountain, 2025-2026
Kour Pour
Olney Gleason

Untitled, 2016
Bosco Sodi
Olney Gleason

Sunscald, 2026
Kour Pour
Olney Gleason

New York’s Olney Gleason stages a compelling dialogue between English artist Kour Pour and Mexican heavyweight Bosco Sodi, a smart pairing of two artists who reinterpret ceramic traditions with their own distinct approach.

Spanning painting, printmaking, and sculpture, the booth traces the layered histories of global exchange embedded in material and form. It also marks the gallery’s first fair presentation with Los Angeles–based Pour ahead of his 2027 solo exhibition with the gallery.

Pour debuts a new series of “erasure paintings” inspired by traditional Chinese porcelain. Here, he silkscreens historical motifs—miniature houses, animals—in cobalt blue onto canvas, then reworks these intricate scenes by wiping and washing away the image. “I’m using Chinese landscape and Persian miniature architecture to sort of ground the works in a place, and then populating the rest of the painting with other imagery that speaks to that exchange,” Pour told Artsy.

By contrast, Sodi presents five clay sculptures finished in luminous gold glaze, including monumental spheres and a stacked cubic form. Shaped by sun, air, and fire before being sealed in gold, the works bring an ancient craft approach to the artist’s refined minimalist sensibility.



from Artsy News https://ift.tt/X02DUVy

6 Boundary-Breaking Artworks in Tracey Emin’s Major London Show https://ift.tt/3Vjwatc

For decades, Dame Tracey Emin has produced raw meditations on abortion, rape, alcoholism, disability, death, love, strength, and persevera...

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