{"id":424187,"date":"2026-02-13T20:27:09","date_gmt":"2026-02-13T20:27:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/424187\/"},"modified":"2026-02-13T20:27:09","modified_gmt":"2026-02-13T20:27:09","slug":"tracey-emin-ive-done-more-in-my-last-five-years-than-in-the-whole-rest-of-my-life-the-art-newspaper","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/424187\/","title":{"rendered":"Tracey Emin: \u2018I\u2019ve done more in my last five years than in the whole rest of my life\u2019 &#8211; The Art Newspaper"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Tracey Emin is internationally renowned for her coruscatingly confessional art, which for over three decades has chronicled an often tumultuous life in various media, including painting, video, textiles, neon, writing, sculpture and installation. Born in Croydon, London, and raised in the seaside town of Margate, Emin first attracted widespread attention when, as a Turner Prize nominee in 1999, she exhibited the now notorious work My Bed (1998) provoking fierce critical debate on what art could\u2014or should\u2014be. Since then, her steadfast refusal to separate the intimately personal from the public has raised her profile to celebrity status as well as making her one of the UK\u2019s most established artists.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">In 2007 Emin represented Britain at the Venice Biennale and was also elected a Royal Academician. She received a CBE for services to the arts in 2012, followed by a damehood in 2024. Throughout, she has continued to challenge notions around artistic acceptability and to confront personal trauma, most recently when she was diagnosed with bladder cancer in 2020 and subjected to invasive surgery, all of which is addressed in her work.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Now, Tate Modern is staging her largest retrospective, which will span works from her first solo exhibition at White Cube in 1993 to her most recent paintings, as well as premiering a documentary featuring the stoma bag that she lives with.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">The Art Newspaper: Why have you called your Tate Modern exhibition A Second Life?<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">TRACEY EMIN: For a long time there wasn\u2019t a title, and it was only when I came up with A Second Life that we could really curate the show. We kept saying things like \u201cold work, new work, before and after\u201d, and I realised that the really big \u201cbefore and after\u201d in my life is before cancer and after cancer. My life changed so dramatically since my cancer: it is just so much better, so much happier, so much more fulfilling. I keep saying to myself, if I had a choice and knew what was going to happen, would I have gone for the cancer and have this wonderful, amazing life that I have? Even when I\u2019m sad or unhappy, I\u2019m never as sad or as unhappy as I was before\u2014I can rectify it, I can put it right.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Having had this edge of nihilism always throughout my life, even as a child, then facing this wall of death like I did, and thinking, is this what I want?, I knew, no, it\u2019s not what I want, I want to live! And if I want to live, what\u2019s the point of living unless it\u2019s worthwhile, unless you do something?<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">You have certainly achieved an astonishing amount over the past five years. As well as all the work you have made, you have moved permanently back to Margate and established the Tracey Emin Artist Residency, a free studio-based art school, along with many other initiatives in the town.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">I\u2019ve done more in my last five years than in the whole rest of my life. But I didn\u2019t set out thinking, oh, if I survive this, I\u2019ll open an art school and create an amazing art world in the town where I grew up. That all just came afterwards with the joy of living. It\u2019s like I\u2019ve been given a second chance. There was six months to live, and then it\u2019s like someone said, \u201cYou know what? I don\u2019t think she\u2019s all bad. Let\u2019s just give her one more chance to see what happens!\u201d And it\u2019s paid off.<\/p>\n<p><img alt=\"\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"644\" height=\"490.1139534883721\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;height:auto;width:100%;background-size:cover;background-position:50% 50%;background-repeat:no-repeat;background-image:url(&quot;data:image\/svg+xml;charset=utf-8,%3Csvg xmlns='http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg' viewBox='0 0 644 490.1139534883721'%3E%3Cfilter id='b' color-interpolation-filters='sRGB'%3E%3CfeGaussianBlur stdDeviation='20'\/%3E%3CfeColorMatrix values='1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 100 -1' result='s'\/%3E%3CfeFlood x='0' y='0' width='100%25' height='100%25'\/%3E%3CfeComposite operator='out' in='s'\/%3E%3CfeComposite in2='SourceGraphic'\/%3E%3CfeGaussianBlur stdDeviation='20'\/%3E%3C\/filter%3E%3Cimage width='100%25' height='100%25' x='0' y='0' preserveAspectRatio='none' style='filter: url(%23b);' href='data:image\/jpeg;base64,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'\/%3E%3C\/svg%3E&quot;)\"  src=\"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/b8255bb8db490f2ecda944afe338abf63a957e87-1720x1309.jpg\"\/><\/p>\n<p>In her Turner Prize-nominated installation My Bed (1998), Emin\u2019s squalid depiction of the depression that descended as a result of relationship breakdown sparked public controversy and made her a household name Photo: Prudence Cuming Associates, courtesy\u00a0Saatchi Gallery<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">How does it feel seeing all these works from your different lives coming back together again?<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">The show isn\u2019t strictly hung chronologically. It\u2019s more complex. We\u2019ve got these categories like Margate, Cyprus, Youth, Rape, Abortion, Mother, Father. So in the Margate bit, I have a painting that I did last year, and the bed [My Bed, 1998] is actually in the second half, because it\u2019s another affirmation of a different kind of near death, more mental than physical (although I was also incredibly thin, I weighed around seven stone when I made it).<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Curating a big show like this is like curating a show by many people because I work in all these different mediums: we\u2019ve got video, films, photos, all kinds of stuff mixed in with painting and drawing and sculpture, and it will be interesting to see really old works hanging next to new works.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">You have an incredible range. But while your media may change, your core preoccupations have been in place from the word go.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Yes, even at art school when we did life drawing, I\u2019d make the figure look like me. Or when we had a project to draw something from the home, I\u2019d draw pictures with me naked in the mirror, drinking tea, looking really sad. If we had to draw buildings, I\u2019d go and draw the house that I lived in as a child. But when I was younger, people just thought it was narcissistic.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Even my first show at White Cube [My Major Retrospective, 1993], people thought that I\u2019d made it up. But I hadn\u2019t, it was all really sincere. It was real. I think I came about at a time when the art world wasn\u2019t looking for sincerity, it was looking for a sort of brashness. And it wasn\u2019t looking for the hand touch. I think that\u2019s why me and Sarah [Lucas] united\u2014because we were interested in things that we\u2019d touched, that were obviously handmade and not necessarily well made. It\u2019s more like a compulsion to create, that\u2019s what\u2019s driven me\u2014the need to be hands-on with everything and touching things.<\/p>\n<p><img alt=\"\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"644\" height=\"858.5478693967902\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;height:auto;width:100%;background-size:cover;background-position:50% 50%;background-repeat:no-repeat;background-image:url(&quot;data:image\/svg+xml;charset=utf-8,%3Csvg xmlns='http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg' viewBox='0 0 644 858.5478693967902'%3E%3Cfilter id='b' color-interpolation-filters='sRGB'%3E%3CfeGaussianBlur stdDeviation='20'\/%3E%3CfeColorMatrix values='1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 100 -1' result='s'\/%3E%3CfeFlood x='0' y='0' width='100%25' height='100%25'\/%3E%3CfeComposite operator='out' in='s'\/%3E%3CfeComposite in2='SourceGraphic'\/%3E%3CfeGaussianBlur stdDeviation='20'\/%3E%3C\/filter%3E%3Cimage width='100%25' height='100%25' x='0' y='0' preserveAspectRatio='none' style='filter: url(%23b);' href='data:image\/jpeg;base64,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'\/%3E%3C\/svg%3E&quot;)\"  src=\"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/17af6649f917d5c938f244a42ad496346679c35f-1807x2409.jpg\"\/><\/p>\n<p>In her bronze sculpture Ascension (2024), Emin explores her relationship with her body following major surgery for bladder cancer in 2020, from which she received the all-clear four years later Photo \u00a9 Theo Christelis\/White Cube<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">This love of making has certainly endured, even your giant bronzes carry your fingerprints.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">A lot of people when they go to my Tate show\u2014and especially young people that haven&#8217;t seen the bed, haven&#8217;t ever seen the blankets\u2014they&#8217;ll see that these things are really made. I didn&#8217;t hand them out, they\u2019re not fabricated. Everything I do in my studio now it&#8217;s just me, and Harry [Weller, creative director of the Tracey Emin Studio] occasionally comes in. I don&#8217;t have any assistants. If I don&#8217;t feel like working, there is no work\u2014it\u2019s that simple. I think now is a time where I can be more appreciated for what I do as an artist, not just for what the work is about, but also how I go about it.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">From the very beginning of your career, you have made work about things that people did not want to talk about\u2014and often still don\u2019t\u2014such as growing up in poverty and being mixed race (something that until recently has largely been glossed over).<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">This to me is quite shocking because even in my Hayward show [Love is What You Want, 2011] there was a whole room called Menphis [sic] that was all about Cyprus and my Nubian great-great-grandfather and not once was it even mentioned. I\u2019ve never made a song and dance about it. I make work about my background and being Cypriot and the Nubian thing and all of that, which is just part of me. [Being brought up by a] single parent, leaving school at 13, leaving home at 15\u2014all of these things are quite loaded, and the expectations of me were obviously not very high. So I\u2019m a good role model for showing what is possible if people are given a chance to excel and do what they\u2019re good at. And be told that they\u2019re good at it, too, which is important.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Recently you have been making a lot of paintings, but your relationship with paint has been a complicated one. The Tate show will include photographs of the works you destroyed when you abandoned painting in 1990\u2014the year after you finished your MA at the Royal College of Art (RCA)\u2014as well as your subsequent attempt to reconcile yourself with painting in the 1996 installation Exorcism of the Last Painting I Ever Made.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">No matter what problems I had personally at the RCA, it was brilliant and I learned so much while I was there. When I left the RCA and I was pregnant and I was homeless and I had all this stuff stacked up against me, I just thought, fuck it\u2014I\u2019ve done all this and still there\u2019s no life for me, I\u2019m still at rock bottom. I felt like a failure, and it deeply affected me. It was terrible. I realised after being pregnant that I didn\u2019t want to make pictures. I had to make the essence of art, of what is really meaningful. I had to make art for the truest, purest reasons, and it had to be really extraordinary, otherwise I couldn\u2019t justify what I was doing.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Then I did a philosophy course, which really helped my mind untangle things. With the writing, I started thinking conceptually, making ideas. And with that you don\u2019t need anything, you just need a pen and paper, so I could get my mind working and be creative. And then I started painting again in 1999.<\/p>\n<p><img alt=\"\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"644\" height=\"468.1075\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;height:auto;width:100%;background-size:cover;background-position:50% 50%;background-repeat:no-repeat;background-image:url(&quot;data:image\/svg+xml;charset=utf-8,%3Csvg xmlns='http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2000\/svg' viewBox='0 0 644 468.1075'%3E%3Cfilter id='b' color-interpolation-filters='sRGB'%3E%3CfeGaussianBlur stdDeviation='20'\/%3E%3CfeColorMatrix values='1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 100 -1' result='s'\/%3E%3CfeFlood x='0' y='0' width='100%25' height='100%25'\/%3E%3CfeComposite operator='out' in='s'\/%3E%3CfeComposite in2='SourceGraphic'\/%3E%3CfeGaussianBlur stdDeviation='20'\/%3E%3C\/filter%3E%3Cimage width='100%25' height='100%25' x='0' y='0' preserveAspectRatio='none' style='filter: url(%23b);' href='data:image\/jpeg;base64,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'\/%3E%3C\/svg%3E&quot;)\"  src=\"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/dec3ac8c832696d08fdcf4d36d7c651279c1fc66-1600x1163.jpg\"\/><\/p>\n<p>Tracey Emin\u2019s The End of Love (2024): \u201dWhen I go in to paint on the canvas, I have absolutely no idea what\u2019s going to happen. I think that\u2019s also why I stopped painting\u2014I was scared of it, like I was going to be consumed by it all\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Photo \u00a9 Ollie Harrop<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Can you talk about the act of painting? It seems that increasingly you have been using the physical stuff of paint to take you in different directions, into a state of flux and flow, with your paintings evolving in a kind of process you have described as alchemical and mediumistic.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Totally. And now it\u2019s even more extreme. When I go in to paint on the canvas, I have absolutely no idea what\u2019s going to happen. I think that\u2019s also why I stopped painting\u2014because I was scared of it, like I was going to disappear or be consumed by it all. It\u2019s taken me a long time to overcome this and understand that a canvas is like a kind of mirror or a wall that I can walk towards, and I can go through it and come back out again. It\u2019s like an entity, a thing.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">So now I get myself ready for painting, and I go into the journey because I know something\u2019s going to happen to me. It\u2019s like having sex with someone new that you really love: you\u2019re never going to be the same again, never going to be the same person afterwards. It\u2019s like that every time I start a new body of work, [I get into] a new headspace with painting. I won\u2019t paint for the sake of it. I\u2019m not one of these 9 to 5 people. I never work towards a show. I just work, work, work.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">There are also many figurative bronzes in the show, both tiny and massive.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">I\u2019ve been making bronzes forever, but the large figurative ones only since 2016, when I took a year\u2019s sabbatical and learned how to make my first giant bronze. I got so much help from the people at the Louise Bourgeois foundation, working at the New York foundry. It really was amazing for me. Before I became friends with Louise, I just made really tiny bronzes. But Louise\u2019s sense of scale was colossal, and that really inspired me: a tiny woman making giant things. She just made what she wanted to make, and it was fantastic how she took the challenge of all these different materials.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Even when they are huge, your bronzes subvert notions of monumentality. The colossal The Mother (2022) outside the Munch museum in Oslo seems more nurturing than oppressive. Then there are the doors you made for the National Portrait Gallery (NPG), which are incised with faces of women, including your mother. Or the painted bronze baby clothes you installed in public spaces throughout Folkestone in 2008\u2014you can\u2019t get more unmonumental than a knitted bootie.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">But the idea isn\u2019t unmonumental, the idea of these tiny little baby clothes that have been lost is really big. The idea came about because in Folkestone, as well as in Margate, there are a lot of single mothers, and I wanted to pay tribute. I wanted people to think about all of those young women, and what it means and how badly they are often treated. With the NPG doors, I like their simplicity and that people can take them or leave them, they can just walk through, but if they look there\u2019s also something else. The Mother in Oslo is more primal, she\u2019s protecting everyone, she\u2019s protecting Munch. The reason why I never wanted to work with large public sculptures is because they were so masculine and macho and I didn\u2019t want to be part of that tradition, I wanted to do my own thing. And now I\u2019ve found a way of doing it\u2014but it just took the balance of time.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">You are no longer Mad Tracey from Margate, which is the title of one of your 1990s appliqu\u00e9 blankets. You\u2019re now Dame Tracey Emin, DBE, RA, Honorary Freewoman of Margate. What advice would you give to your younger self?<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">There are many things I would say that wouldn\u2019t be particularly kind or nice. But I would also say exactly what\u2019s happened: don\u2019t give up, never give up.<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">\u2022 <a class=\"transition-colors duration-default shadow-externalLink hover:text-red-1\" href=\"https:\/\/www.tate.org.uk\/whats-on\/tate-modern\/tracey-emin\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\">Tracey Emin: A Second Life<\/a>, Tate Modern, 27 February-31 August<\/p>\n<p>Biography<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Born: 1963 Croydon<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Lives and works: Margate and the south of France<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Education: 1986 Maidstone College of Art, BA; 1989 Royal College of Art, MA<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Key shows: 1997 South London Gallery; 2003 Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam; 2007 British Pavilion, Venice Biennale; 2011 Hayward Gallery, London; 2020 Royal Academy of Arts, London; 2025 Palazzo Strozzi, Florence<\/p>\n<p class=\"pt-dp-p font-text-light font-light text-lg leading-normal tracking-wide mb-base last:mb-0\" itemprop=\"text\">Represented by: White Cube, Galleria Lorcan O\u2019Neill Roma and Xavier Hufkens<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Tracey Emin is internationally renowned for her coruscatingly confessional art, which for over three decades has chronicled an&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":424188,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[31],"tags":[11975,6225,6485,6486,1120,96,10993,42991,59486,56,54,55],"class_list":{"0":"post-424187","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-arts-and-design","8":"tag-artist-interview","9":"tag-arts","10":"tag-arts-and-design","11":"tag-artsanddesign","12":"tag-design","13":"tag-entertainment","14":"tag-exhibitions","15":"tag-tate-modern","16":"tag-tracey-emin","17":"tag-uk","18":"tag-united-kingdom","19":"tag-unitedkingdom"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/424187","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=424187"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/424187\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/424188"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=424187"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=424187"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/uk\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=424187"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}