Maggi Hambling: the great British artist on controversy, criticism and being a queer icon at 76
Season 3, Episode 1, Mar 08, 2022, 06:06 AM
The legendary British artist reminisces about her bohemian art school training, her love affair with Francis Bacon’s muse, how she feels about being a national treasure and queer icon, how she deals with bad reviews and why, at 76, she still refuses to conform – with plenty of surprises along the way
Maggi Hambling (1945-) is a British painter and sculptor whose visceral work spans portraits of her bohemian friends past – from Soho dandy Sebastian Horsley to Henrietta Moraes, once the 1950s queen of London bohemia and muse to Francis Bacon, then Maggi’s own – and divisive public works that include her giant scallop on a beach in Suffolk on the English coast, near where she grew up, her Oscar Wilde bench in London and most recently, her 2020 bust of early women’s rights advocate Mary Wollstonecraft, who she depicted naked.
For the first of three special episodes for Women’s History Month 2022 – and ahead of the opening of her first ever show in New York – we find Maggi and her pug dog, Peggy, through the fog of cigarette smoke at her south London studio. As she puffs, she reminisces about her crucial life training at the East Anglian Art School, her younger years falling in and out of Soho drinking establishments, and her love affair with the 1950s queen of bohemia, Henrietta Moraes, who was Francis Bacon’s muse and later her own.
Maggi gives us a whistlestop tour through her approach to creativity and process, the controversy that some of her public artworks have caused, becoming a national treasure, how she deals with bad reviews, being a gay icon and calling herself queer in tribute to her late filmmaker friend Derek Jarman, her affinity with Oscar Wilde and why the work, above all else, comes first. An audience with Maggi is never a dull moment.
Maggi Hambling: Real Time is at the Marlborough in NYC, 10 March-30 April 2022. marlboroughnewyork.com.
This episode was produced by Hannah Fisher and presented and exec-produced by Kate Hutchinson. Additional reporting by Georgie Rogers. Sound design by Colour It In. Photography by Laura Kelly.
Music in this episode with thanks to freemusicarchive.org:
Humbug by Crowander
Carpe Diem by Dee Yan Key
Lava Spout by Blue Wave Theory
Be My Guest - Crowander
Humbug by Crowander
Carpe Diem by Dee Yan Key
Lava Spout by Blue Wave Theory
Be My Guest - Crowander
Intro music by Emmy The Great.