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Monday, October 7, 2024 |
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Tracey Emin sends anti-Brexit message in pink neon |
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British artist Tracey Emin's new neon sculpture "I Want My Time With You", is pictured at St Pancras station in London on April 11, 2018. Passengers arriving in London by train from continental Europe from this week will be greeted with a new neon sculpture by artist Tracey Emin carrying a "subliminal messsage" against Brexit. Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS / AFP.
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LONDON (AFP).- British artist Tracey Emin has unveiled her latest artwork: a bright pink homage to Europe at St Pancras station in London -- Britain's rail gateway to the continent.
Emin, one of country's most famous living artists, said she conceived the 20-metre-long text-based work, "I Want My Time With You", as a response to Brexit.
The installation -- bright neon letters spelling out the phrase -- is suspended from the ceiling inside the cavernous Victorian era station facing trains arriving from continental Europe.
"Essentially, it is a great subliminal message sent out to the rest of Europe... I want my time with Europe," she told reporters at Monday's unveiling.
"I'm deeply saddened that Britain is going to be demoted to a tiny island floating around in the North Sea."
Emin, 54, who first rose to fame with her 1999 exhibit "My Bed" -- a stained bed surrounded with detritus -- said she is not against people who voted to leave the European Union.
"What I'm worried about is the people who voted Brexit who didn't understand what they were voting for," she added.
"The people who did understand, that was their prerogative."
The contemporary artist said the work also aimed to evoke the romance of stations, and being met by someone after getting off a train.
She revealed the project proved a health and safety headache.
"The main consideration is the train drivers coming in. They mustn't be shocked," added Emin, who is known for her raw openness and often sexually provocative work.
She first emerged more than two decades ago as part of a wave of young, bold, British artists and has gradually become a staple of the art world establishment.
The installation will remain on display at St Pancras until the end of the year.
© Agence France-Presse
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