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White Cube’s galleries are closed for the holidays and will reopen on 7 January 2025.

The Last Great Adventure is You

Tracey Emin

The Last Great Adventure is You

8 October – 16 November 2014

Dates

8 October – 16 November 2014

Location

White Cube Bermondsey

144 – 152 Bermondsey Street
London SE1 3TQ

'The work is about rites of passage, of time and age, and the simple realisation that we are always alone.’

— Tracey Emin, July 2014

‘The Last Great Adventure is You’, a major exhibition by Tracey Emin was her first at the London gallery in five years. Featuring bronze sculptures, gouaches, paintings, large-scale embroideries and neon works, the exhibition chronicled the contemplative nature of work by an artist who has consistently examined her life with excoriating candour.

Reflective in tone, the works in the exhibition were the result of many years’ development, from the bronze sculptures – the most significant body she has made to date – to the works on canvas. There is a complexity in the sculptural form of the bronzes, simultaneously robust yet tender, that points to a consummate understanding of material, composition and subject matter. In Grotto (2014), a tessellated, cave-like chamber gives sanctuary to a solitary figure as artist proxy, while the muscular form of Bird (2014) harmonises sinuous lines with gravity and grace. A series of bronze bas relief plaques portray figures that appear amorphous yet distinct, with subtle interplay between light and shadow.

While the paintings at first appear simple and immediate, many of them are the result of application, obliteration and layering over a period of several years. Emin repeatedly returns to the canvases as a means of reviewing, revising and reconsidering her own position in relation to painting through temporal passages.

The title ‘The Last Great Adventure is You’, which was transcribed in neon within the exhibition, was originally intended by Emin as a reference to the ‘other person’; however, over the two year period since she began creating this body of work, she came to realise that the implication was once again coming back to the self.

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