And that's all for today
Thanks very much to all who posted questions and very special thanks to Tracy for answering so candidly to as many as she could.
GiannisDrakos asks:
Hi Tracey! I am humbled from being able to post a question for you.
A while ago, during my university years, I linked your career to the likes of Frida Kahlo and Nan Goldin in my dissertation and suggested that the deeply personal and confessional nature of your work (and Kahlo’s and Goldin’s) is derived from the need to nurture and caress your art like nurturing/taking care of a family or a child. Was there any truth to my thesis?
With all respect, it is my belief that you would be an excellent mother. All the best, Giannis
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browniebabe asks:
Hello Tracey, I’d be interested in your thoughts on Louise Bourgeois, particularly in relation to your collaboration with an artist credited as the originator of confessional art. How did it feel to be part of Bourgeois’s infinitely complex world? Did you find inspiration there? It appears Bourgoise spent her whole life looking for emotional salvation in the form of psychoanalysis, have you ever been tempted to go down that tortuous path yourself?
ID0990057 says:
Tracey, I am a huge fan of your writing, for me it’s the most important aspect of your work. Will we ever see The Vanishing Lake? If not, will we see another collection of your writing?
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VCronie asks:
Did you find it? Did you find what you had been looking for: that girl, youth, the thing that is lost?
scandinerd53 asks:
Hi Tracey,
I read somewhere that you were considering moving to the States permanently. Is this true?
Do you think such a major move would have a significant change on how you approach your art or is your art so personal that location becomes irrelevant.
As a Londoner I would be sad to see you leave permanently.
Highbury asks:
Now that you’re Professor of Drawing what do you tell your students?
Years ago a sculpture lecturer said “if you can’t draw poperly how are you going to plan a work in 3 dimensions?” I thought ‘phew! Thank heavens I’m doing painting’ and never really learnt to draw ... No bother. But now that I’m much older I realise that I can’t capture a particular expression or gesture. What I want to do has changed and I don’t have the tools.
JRampage92 asks:
Hi Tracey, in some odd parallel universe... If you could hypothetically choose another form of a creative outlet that was not art, what do you think it would it be?
All the Best,
James
liberty4 asks:
Tracey, how do you deal with the ugly souls that persecute and attack you?
I love a good discussion, fighting and justifying your work is great and part of the job. BUT it seems there are some cold, narrow minded people that are just hateful towards you, even when it’s no longer about art. It makes me livid. If you don’t like what Tracey does, go back to your bitter dark hole. Like a bully, retaliation can often fuel a fire. So, what is the best way to handle these people?
I will always root for you!
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mirthcontrol says:
By mistake I walked into the “members only” part of the Royal Academy when your drawings of wee birds were on display... Did you like the juxtaposition of all these old dears sitting having tea and cake surrounded by your art??
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hopskotch555 asks:
What do you think your occupation would be if you were forbidden from producing art?
aluncrockford asks:
Are you at all concerned that people from a working class background will never have the chance to reach there potential due to a combination of high tuition fees and education establishments turning art colleges into theory based university courses involving a lot of talking and very little doing.
texavery asks:
Do you feel you were born a few years too late? Do you think that had you risen during the punk period you may have been able to have had a bigger influence in, say, music, fashion and subsequent artists? Or do you feel that your work is something that should be self indulgent and a enjoyable way of making money?
Peephole Circus asks:
For me, the most striking aspect to your work is your honesty. Is this something that gets harder to maintain as you get older or do you find it easier? And does fame impact this? Do you feel the need to give less away as to be able to maintain a private life or have you resigned to the fact your life is public and feel no need to hold back in any way any more?
clapposcillator asks:
Hello Tracey, if you were given unlimited resources and total artistic freedom, what would you do?
NB just renovating & re-opening Dreamland not an option :^)
Jack Alford asks:
Hey Tracey, some of you work feels like a feminist statement, leaving the head off of women’s bodies and that. Do you think it is important to tackle prejudice through the arts?
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ID5467716 asks:
I read recently you said Mothers could not be great artists. That the exceptions of parents being great artists were men. Is this is a mis-quote. What about Paula Rego being a mother and a great artist?
Here’s Tracey, all set and ready to answer your questions.
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Josh Leon asks:
Could you talk about how you go about your process, do you start by working with materials, or words, or ideas, or from inspiration, is there method to how you approach your work, or is it a matter of doing it everyday until the works become clear?
domhuckbody asks:
Hi, Tracey! I’m an art student currently in the process of writing my personal study about you and your work and was just wondering if you could help me out a little. I apologise in advance if you get asked this question a lot, but I just wanted to know why you make autobiographical and personal work.
I’m a huge fan of you and your work and can’t wait to see the new exhibition at the Whitecube!
Thank you!
Dom Huckbody
gvorn00 asks:
Tracey, before your success, how did you set yourself up – fund and establish your practice?
Tracey is now with us
Tracey Emin is now answering your questions. Her first reply was to marosc, who asked:
Hi Tracey. I’ve been a fan of both you and your work for a while. You seem to be more available than other artists of your stature – making appearances at your shop and car boot fairs as well as regularly producing affordable art. Is this part of your ethos as an artist? What do you see as the social role of the artist in the modern world?
All the best,
Martin
Post your questions for Tracey Emin
Margate’s most famous daughter squinted into the Young British Artist spotlight 20 years ago, with works that were emotionally raw and bracingly honest: an unmade bed, a tent naming everyone she’d slept with, a beach hut she stayed in. Perhaps the gobbiest out of a hardly retiring bunch of YBAs, she became tabloid as well as dinner party fodder – but crucially didn’t lose focus, as she turned her hand to a huge range of media: neon, painting, textiles, films and more.
Some of these forms appear in her new show at the White Cube, opening 8 October, where giant embroidery sits alongside paintings and bronze sculptures, much of it focused on her own body. “I’m trying to work out why my body has changed so much,” she told the Observer’s Rachel Cooke this month. “Where does that girl go? Where does that youth go? That thing that’s lost, where has it gone? I’m looking for it in the pictures; I’m looking for it in the paintbrush.”
To celebrate the launch of this ever-personal work, Emin will answer your questions in a live webchat on Monday 6 October from 11.30am BST onwards – post them in the comments section below, and she will endeavour to answer as many as possible.
I've answered each question as they came. I have not prioritised or decided to answer the ones I liked the look of best, and for the questions I haven't answered, I'm sorry, I simply ran out of time. But I really enjoyed doing this, and in lots of ways the questions are a lot more interesting and stimulating than a lot of questions I get asked in interviews.