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Black and white photograph of the artist Rachel Whiteread
Rachel Whiteread, Untitled (House), 1993. Concrete, wood, and steel.

(Demolished January 11, 1994)

Rachel Whiteread, Untitled (House), 1993. Concrete, wood, and steel.

(Demolished January 11, 1994)

John Wilson speaks to internationally acclaimed artist Dame Rachel Whiteread about the influences on her practice as she recalls some of her most famous works. Part of the Brit Art boom of the early 1990s, Rachel was not only the first woman to win the Turner Prize but also, at 29, the youngest artist to do so. Rachel is best known for large scale sculptures cast in plaster or concrete. She made headlines with an inside-out impression of an entire terraced house in east London, and for her Holocaust Memorial in Vienna. Commissioned to make a work to stand on the empty fourth plinth in London’s Trafalgar Square, she cast the plinth itself in a huge block of translucent resin. A globally renowned artist who once represented Britain at the Venice Biennale, the work of Dame Rachel Whiteread can be found in collections, galleries and public spaces all around the world.

Listen to the full broadcast at bbc.co.uk

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