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Emin and femininity

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  • Emin and femininity

    Emin and femininity
    By Jackie Wullschlager

    FT
    June 9 2007 03:00

    Will 21st-century art belong to women? For most of its 100-year
    existence, the Venice biennalehas consisted of exhibitions by white
    male painters from western Europe and America. But this year, the UK,
    France, Germany and other nations are represented by women working in
    mixed media. The result is the most feminised biennale in history, and
    a shift from the boldly universal to an emphasis on emotional
    storytelling in a quieter vein, which unites female artists across the
    globe.

    Queen and pioneer here is Tracey Emin. Borrowed Light, her exhibition
    of paintings, drawings, sewn work, neon installations and wooden
    tent-like sculptures, is triumphant, original, beautiful, moving and
    the best thing she has done so far. Her trademark sadness and
    loneliness still shout out - the embroidery "Sometimes I feel so
    fucking lost" (2005), the seeping textures and outlines of wistful
    figures and hearts in the "Abortion Watercolours" (1990), and simple
    neon inscriptions which almost speak aloud, such as "I know Iknow I
    know", all provide retrospective context here - but as challenge and
    liberation, Venice and the international setting are her turning point.


    In compelling new work Emin responds with paintings and drawings which
    place her as late-expressionist heir to such distillers of pain as Egon
    Schiele and Edvard Munch. Her focus is the female body, and especially
    its splayed open legs and crotch; in the series "Tower Drawings" what
    makes her depictions exceptional is the mastery of a hesitant, wavering
    line which seems to start, stab, retreat and jolt forward, yet remains
    always aesthetically strong: a distinct signature of doubt and anxiety.

    In the paintings - "Fuzzy Sex", "Ruined", "Preying for a Penis", the
    "Purple Virgin" series - the surprise is how that level of intimacy and
    longing is carried over to paintings whose compositional tension and
    tortuous figuration belie the apparent spontaneity of their
    mark-making. The chromatic range is delicate but rich, recalling
    sensuous colourists from Venetian fresco painters to de Kooning. The
    effect, as Emin puts it, is at once "pretty and hard core": the
    summation of half a lifetime's absorption in autobiographical themes,
    but with an exhilarating sense of future ambitious possibilities in
    paint.

    Women in the visual arts have at least a century of catching up to do.
    Venice shows them doing it at speed, from Armenian Sonia Balassanian's
    video diaries of a soldier, wife and freedom-fighter in "Who is the
    Victim?" and China's "Everyday Miracles", where four female artists use
    traditional feminine materials to question identity and social change,
    to Isa Genzken's icy astronaut dolls and ironically formal plastic
    ornamentation conveying a vision of chaos and multinational greed in
    "Oil". All have their charms, but Emin alone is on her way to becoming
    an icon of female emotional pain transformed into art. JW
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