Artist Emma Talbot: Telling the Stories of Our Times | Louisiana Channel

“My work is really about a very personal experience of being alive at this period of time.”
We visited Emma Talbot in her studio in London, to talk about how she transforms the intangible realms of thought and emotion into tangible expressions on silk canvases. As she introduces herself in the opening moments of our conversation, Talbot articulates her artistic project as an exploration of stories that echo the zeitgeist. Touching on big contemporary issues, such as societal structures, and our relationships with technology, ecology and nature, Talbot describes her art as an interrogation of the human condition: “the brevity and fragility of life itself; what is given value and worth, what is memorialised, and the inevitable experiences of love and grief.”
Talbot's artistic repertoire spans from paintings on silk to animations and drawings. The latter always works as her starting point: “I developed a practice in which I start withdrawing, and I let myself draw whatever comes to mind without really trying to direct the subject of the drawings or what they're exploring so that I can see what it is I'm thinking.” Yet, it's only after a phase of deep research - online, through reading, or by seeking diverse forms of knowledge - that she refines and enriches these raw expressions into motives and narratives.
In her winning proposal for the Max Mara Art Prize for Women, Talbot took as a starting point her fascination with Gustav Klimt’s painting Three Ages of Woman (1905), which features a naked elderly woman standing in apparent shame. In her mind, the woman looked like a future version of Talbot herself, and so the figure became an avatar to tackle some of the contemporary issues that Talbot addresses in her practice.
Talbot's pivot to using silk as a canvas reflects a profound quest for artistic freedom. Influenced by writers like Hélène Cixous, who explored finding one's own voice in writing, Talbot sought an equivalent liberation in her visual language. The ethereal qualities of silk offered the flexibility she craved - something drapable, cuttable, and wearable - a material that could carry the weight of ideas without becoming burdened by historical constraints.
Her intricate process of painting on silk involves a delicate balance, where fluidity meets substance, allowing her to control the marks on the surface while embracing the material's inherent delicacy. The resulting large-scale paintings, described by Talbot as "collages of ideas," become immersive experiences, inviting viewers into a dialogue with the intricate narratives within.
Emma Talbot (b.1969) studied at the Birmingham Institute of Art & Design and Royal College of Art. Her work was showcased at the 59th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia as part of the exhibition ’Milk of Dreams.’ In 2022, she was awarded the Max Mara Art Prize for Women, which cumulated in the exhibition The Age / L’Età shown in Collezione Maramotti in Reggio Emilia and Whitechapel Gallery in London. Talbot's exhibition history includes solo shows such as “The Human Experience” (2023) at Kunshtall Stavanger ’In the End, the Beginning’ (2023) at Kesselhaus, KINDL, Berlin, "When Screens Break" at Eastside Projects in Birmingham (2020), ’Ghost Calls’ at DCA in Dundee (2020), and ’Sounders of The Depths’ at GEM Kunstmuseum in The Hague, Netherlands (2019-20). Noteworthy exhibitions also include ’Woman-Snake-Bird’ at Galerie Onrust in Amsterdam (2018) and ’The World Blown Apart’ at the same gallery in 2017. Her recent work ‘Seeds Grow in Fertile Ground (Every Thought is an Opening)’ (2023) was featured in the group exhibition ‘Irreplaceable Human? The Conditions of Creativity in the Age of AI’ at Louisiana Museum of Modern Art. Her work has found a home in collections worldwide, including Guerlain in Paris, British Council Collection, Arts Council Collection, City of Birmingham Museum & Art Gallery, David Roberts Collection, Saatchi Collection, University of the Arts London, Art Gallery of Western Australia in Perth, Fries Museum NL, and Arnhem Museum NL.
Emma Talbot was interviewed by Nanna Rebekka in her studio in London in April 2023.
Camera: Alex Newton
Edited and produced by: Nanna Rebekka
Additional footage:
CIRCA - Emma Talbot Documentary
Installation view of ‘Emma Talbot. In the End, the Beginning’ at Kesselhaus, KINDL by art/beats
Emma Talbot's documentary of the 8th Max Mara Art Prize for Women residency and her exhibition at the Collezione Maramotti produced by TIWI.
Copyright: Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2023.
Louisiana Channel is supported by Den A.P. Møllerske Støttefond, Ny Carlsbergfondet and C.L. Davids Fond og Samling.
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Пікірлер: 22

  • @inMuro
    @inMuroАй бұрын

    i love the way she talks about her work. very inspiring for my practice. thank you.

  • @bearbait7405
    @bearbait740529 күн бұрын

    Thank you.

  • @nancywalter7555
    @nancywalter75556 ай бұрын

    Another wonderful and thoughtful talk… I’m so grateful.

  • @artprojects_
    @artprojects_6 ай бұрын

    I wasnt ready to meet such immediate images today. Amazing work

  • @albertoballocca
    @albertoballocca6 ай бұрын

    Warrior!!Great woman and artista!

  • @aeastman59
    @aeastman595 ай бұрын

    I see designs and illustrations of ideas... a category of "art".. seems more social awareness design/communication... I agree it does seem personal to the artist, expression of personal opinion, intellectual.... the expense and ethics of silk is another thing.... it actually does make me think of textile design for items for the house: rugs, towels, curtains...

  • @sebawalisio5060
    @sebawalisio50606 ай бұрын

    These are amazing!

  • @puncherry
    @puncherry6 ай бұрын

    Very touching, deep and brilliant

  • @rinoceronte3000
    @rinoceronte30006 ай бұрын

    Great stuff!

  • @ravenshaw2495
    @ravenshaw24956 ай бұрын

    I didn't know Julia Louis-Dreyfus had so many talents

  • @jazw4649
    @jazw46495 ай бұрын

    Almost a cross between Hilma AF Klint and Canadian woodland Indigenous art and some psychedelica

  • @nostalgic-one
    @nostalgic-one6 ай бұрын

    She sounds so sad

  • @calvink.4511
    @calvink.45115 ай бұрын

    Like multifaceted artists

  • @salazeug
    @salazeug6 ай бұрын

    Wallpaper for the worst coffee shop you’ve ever been to. Feels like there should be a blackboard with a menu written on it next to these paintings

  • @TheStockwell

    @TheStockwell

    6 ай бұрын

    Art is now about taking everything you read - about everything - and saying that's what your work is about. Having to recite a manifesto about all the meaning you're putting into your work is like having to explain why a joke is funny. Best wishes from Vermont 🍁

  • @LyubomirIko

    @LyubomirIko

    5 ай бұрын

    It's a free market. Go buy and support artist and artworks that matter for you. But you don't and often you cant really. The institution and the people who really subsidize art today have agenda. So you will have to cope with their kind of vision.

  • @TheStockwell

    @TheStockwell

    5 ай бұрын

    @@LyubomirIko I believe the original comment is about quality and nature of the work - not the commercial apparatus which displays and sells the product.

  • @LyubomirIko

    @LyubomirIko

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@TheStockwell You seem very confused. Traditional art is selling poorly, except if its something really exceptional. (and to achieve this, the learning and dedication curve is often insane) Maybe you will somehow make a living if you paint hard for gift shops or on the streets of tourist city. But it's hard and materials, and rent for studio and the artist living style will drive you insane. Meanwhile the big galleries and art institutions, nonprofit organization and whatnot work with; and fully subsidize mediocre contemporary art like Emma Talbot. She mostly doesn't even need to sell her work - they pay her in order to create new installations and new big shows (usually because the work convey "THE WOKE MESSAGE") So, as an young art student you have a choice - to either become what the big galleries and art institutions and nonprofit organization wants to see, or to make art for the free market that is more close to the traditions (let's say nature morte or landscape). But the catch is that the ordinary people don't buy that much art, and you will barely make a living, and good luck to make exhibition in big gallery. So, you become contemporary artist and you will paint for the institution and the big galleries and the nonprofit organization and they will secure your living and give you ton of exposure. So, the next time you are unhappy about contemporary art - think when was the last time you help a traditional artist grow.

  • @farawayeye8423

    @farawayeye8423

    5 ай бұрын

    Of course! By now…

  • @Artcollector384
    @Artcollector3846 ай бұрын

    excellence

  • @lisengel2498
    @lisengel24985 ай бұрын

    I love the way this video shows how practices of all kinds become windows to what and how we experience and at the same time the ground of practices of expressing mystery and meaning. For me the interesting wonder of Art seem to be the multidimensionslity of possibilities of interest and ways of dancing with life and in the dance creating life rhythms and lines of life - 🎶🩷🎵🌷

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