Nick Willing on Paula Rego
Talk Art
Russell Tovey and Robert Diament c/o Independent Talent
4.6 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 16 April 2026
⏱️ 75 minutes
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Summary
Robert meets Nick Willing at the studio of his mother Paula Rego (1935–2022) to discuss a major exhibition of drawings and works on paper by Rego, opening this week at Victoria Miro in London.
The most comprehensive exhibition of Rego’s drawings to date, Story Line features works from the 1950s until the artist’s death, shining new light on Rego’s evolving use of line in media from pen and ink to pastel, conté, charcoal and pencil, and how it was driven by her unique approach to storytelling throughout her life. The exhibition is
accompanied by a new book written by the artist’s son, Nick Willing.
‘When you write your story… invention comes when you do a drawing. As you are drawing something, it very often turns into something else, and you can go with it. It develops in a completely different way, it’s organic and it’s done with the hand. The hand makes it change and so on.’ – Paula Rego, The White Review, 2011
Paula Rego considered herself first and foremost a ‘drawrer’ (her word). From political protest to personal introspection, activism to domestic power games, subversive humour to challenging family relationships, it was through drawing that she understood herself and the world around her, discovering ways of expressing complex
ideas through a single image. As Nick Willing comments, ‘A Rego drawing is never just one thing, but many feelings working together to reveal the truth. They not only helped her understand the world but can also help us understand it too.’Driven by her distinctive approach to storytelling, this exhibition demonstrates how Rego adapted her line to
emphasise the emotional nuance of the stories she told, and how her drawing techniques also reflected her interior emotional narrative. The works reveal the unique development of an artist whose visual storytelling, drawn from a wide variety of sources, spoke directly to us about the essential human traits of desire, loss, violence and power.
The works on show vary from intimate drawings which have never been exhibited before to studies for some of Rego’s most recognisable paintings. These are accompanied by notes, letters, sketchbooks, photographs and other archival material from throughout Rego’s life – among myriad rarities is a drawing Rego made when she was nine years old of her grandmother, while the exhibition concludes with works including a drawing she made of her own granddaughter.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Good afternoon, good morning, good evening, wherever you are in the world. I am Robert |
| 0:07.8 | Diamant and this is Talk Art. Welcome to Talk Art. Now today I am in North London and I have made, |
| 0:15.8 | the only way I can describe this is a pilgrimage to a location which is very important in my understanding and development |
| 0:23.2 | of art. And because I'm hosting season 27 by myself, I've wanted to really dig deep and |
| 0:29.2 | in a way pay attention, which is a deliberate phrase which we'll be exploring later on, but pay |
| 0:34.5 | attention to the people, to the artists, to the works that really captivated |
| 0:39.4 | my imagination in my teens, particularly, when I first got obsessed with art. And today we are in |
| 0:45.8 | the studio of the late Polarago, who is somebody that I would describe almost like as a kind of |
| 0:52.7 | teacher to me, but also the blueprint for |
| 0:55.7 | what went on to be my sort of fascination in art and all of the artists that I've bonded with |
| 1:01.2 | and become friends with over the years. It always comes back to Paula and to her incredible legacy |
| 1:06.3 | and body of work. And we were actually sat in the original studio where from the early 90s, she moved |
| 1:12.4 | here and it's filled with paintings and drawings and prints and sculptures that she would |
| 1:19.2 | use as kind of life models, I guess, in a way. And so many objects and all of the brushes |
| 1:24.8 | and crayons and pencils is just endless. |
| 1:28.7 | And even perfume bottles, there's all kinds of things here. |
| 1:31.5 | It really feels like a space that's been very lived and loved. |
| 1:35.4 | And if you know anything about Paula's work, you know, every breath was about making art. |
| 1:41.1 | And you really get a sense of that in here. |
| 1:43.6 | I think she even used to sleep in the |
| 1:46.0 | room next door to have a break near her library at the time. And honestly, I'm really emotionally |
| 1:52.1 | overwhelmed. And today, I am feeling fearless, because I think that is a word that is often |
... |
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