Artist Dame Tracey Emin ‘proud to be British’

Speaking ahead of her new exhibition at London’s Tate Modern, Dame Tracey said art had improved her home town of Margate.

By contributor Jenny Garnsworthy, Press Association
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Supporting image for story: Artist Dame Tracey Emin ‘proud to be British’
Dame Tracy Emin ahead of the new exhibition, Tracey Emin: A Second Life at London’s Tate Modern (Yui Mok/PA)

Dame Tracey Emin has said the people of her home town of Margate rejected Reform as they “are a lot more intelligent and a lot more politically astute than what people imagine”.

Speaking ahead of her new exhibition at London’s Tate Modern, the artist said she believes she has helped changed the Kent seaside resort for the better.

Dame Tracey said: “I’m so proud to be British, but what I don’t like is jingoistic, racist, bigoted behaviour that divides our country.

“Twice (Nigel) Farage has tried to get into Margate, and it was a joke. He didn’t get in because there’s a lot of people there that are a lot more intelligent and a lot more politically astute than what people imagine.”

The artist, who received a damehood for services to art in 2024, said life was “tough” in Margate, but that in recent years it had boomed with new restaurants, cafes and boutiques opening up.

The seaside town also saw the opening of the Turner Contemporary art gallery in 2011.

Dame Tracey continued: “There are 18,000 people living below the poverty line and a lot of those people are working, they have jobs.

“Margate’s a tough place, but I tell you what’s making it better – art.

“Art is really changing the landscape of it.

“It sounds boujee, and sort of like gentrification, but all of that is giving young people who work there jobs.”

Dame Tracey, who has helped fund a cafe which teaches hospitality skills to young people in the town, added: “I’m not just saying something’s got to be done, I’m actually doing it.

Dame Tracy Emin stands next to her artwork My Bed, 1998
Dame Tracy Emin stands next to her artwork My Bed, 1998 (Yui Mok/PA)

“If more people did something, the country would be better, we’d be in a better place, and then people like Reform wouldn’t have such a big, loud voice, would they? Because people wouldn’t listen to them.”

Dame Tracey, who previously said her new Tate Modern show will be a “benchmark” for her work, also spoke of how not enough people from working-class backgrounds are able to train in art due to hefty tuition fees.

She added: “My big advice is don’t let the fees stop you from going to university.

“Otherwise it means only wealthy people are being educated and having a higher education, and that’s morally wrong.”

Her show, named Second Life, is the largest-ever survey exhibition of her work and will look back at her 40-year career with her defining works as well as pieces that have never been exhibited publicly before.

A spokesman for the London art gallery said it brings together more than 100 works encompassing painting, video, textile, neon, sculpture and installation, and will look at how Dame Tracey has used the “female body as a powerful tool to explore passion, pain, and healing”.

It includes works from her first-ever solo exhibition at White Cube in 1993, and two of her best-known installations, Exorcism Of The Last Painting I Ever Made (1996) and My Bed (1998), the latter of which was nominated for the Turner Prize.

Dame Tracy Emin stands next to her artworks I Will Not Be Alone, 2025, and neon sign Meet Me In Heaven I Will Wait For You, 2004
Dame Tracy Emin stands next to her artworks I Will Not Be Alone, 2025, and neon sign Meet Me In Heaven I Will Wait For You, 2004 (Yui Mok/PA)

Dame Tracey’s quilt The Last of the Gold 2002, which is emblazoned with an “A to Z of abortion” providing advice for women facing a similar situation, will be shown publicly for the first time.

Her more recent bronze sculpture Ascension 2024, which explores her new relationship with her body following major surgery for bladder cancer, is joined by new photographs showing the stoma that she now lives with.

Dame Tracey said: “I’m very excited about having a show at Tate Modern.

“For me, it’s one of the greatest international contemporary art museums in the world and it’s here in London.

“I feel this show, titled A Second Life, will be a benchmark for me. A moment in my life when I look back and go forward. A true celebration of living.”

Tracey Emin: A Second Life will launch at the Tate Modern on Friday and run until August 31.

Reform UK has been approached for comment.