Tracey Emin British, 1963
You Forgot Who You Are, 2013
Etching on Somerset soft white paper
Signed and annotated with title in pencil, on recto
Signed and annotated with title in pencil, on recto
14.57 x 15.75 in
37.0 x 40.0 cm
37.0 x 40.0 cm
© Tracey Emin
Among the YBA’s most celebrated names, Tracey Emin has established herself as an artist not only of great depth, but of variety. Most known for her autobiographical work which focuses...
Among the YBA’s most celebrated names, Tracey Emin has established herself as an artist not only of great depth, but of variety. Most known for her autobiographical work which focuses on self-interrogation, her most celebrated and controversial pieces are those which examine turbulent childhood experiences and sexual history. She has described her work as confessional, labelling her work with titles which often convey exactly what the viewer is intended to see. Here, examining the emotional trials of relationship with a charming stylistic naivety, Emin continues the narrative established in the print Closed. In even less ambiguous fashion, You Forgot Who You Are assumes a double entendre, with the artist speaking to both herself and the viewer. The statement asks of each whether it is intended as a form of comfort of gaslighting.