
The Interview Tracey Emin, artist: I’ve been given a second chance
Mar 16, 2026
Tracey Emin, British contemporary artist known for confessional works like My Bed, reflects on a ‘second life’ after cancer and giving up alcohol. She talks about channeling pain and memory into her art. She discusses body, aging, feminism in the art world, reinstalling My Bed, and how galleries can transform visitors.
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Cancer Gave Her A Second Life
- Tracey Emin describes surviving cancer as being given a second life that forced her to stop nihilistic behaviours and clean up her life.
- She links that awakening to remorse about past indulgence and a deliberate decision to respect herself and move forward after surgery and treatment.
Imagination Turns Pain Into Art
- Tracey Emin links creativity and vivid imagination to how she perceives pain and composes art, using visual detail to translate sensation into work.
- She explains seeing detailed images (mice on a seashell) and describing spinal pain visually, connecting physical experience to artistic making.
The Scale Of Her Life Saving Operation
- Tracey Emin recounts the gravity of her seven-and-a-half-hour cancer operation and the 20% chance she might not survive the surgery.
- She lists the removals: bladder, lymph nodes, half her vagina, urethra, part of bowel and a hysterectomy, emphasising the operation's scale.
