Monday, December 12, 2016

Conclusion

In conclusion to organizing an exhibition of works by various artists I have learned a valuable lesson that all individuals have different perspectives of one topic. We do not all feel the same when we look at a naked pregnant woman. I may see divine beauty, natural anatomy, and pure love that should be displayed all over the world as beauty and normal. Others may feel shock of the image that may not be as accepting to view in public spaces. As I learned about the life of the artist, I was able to see the art in a different way than my initial reaction to the image.

Finding art that explained my feelings of motherhood came natural to me because I have devoted my life to motherhood. I feel that there are so many emotions and feelings that are connected to motherhood that I would be able to fill pages and pages of artwork that connected the motherhood theme.   The challenging part of curating an art gallery online was learning how to blog. This was my first time blogging and I was not familiar with the techniques.  As I started to research how to blog back in September, I found myself in an unfamiliar space. I decided to just jump right in and do it. The only way to find out is to try. I feel this is the same feeling artists feel when they start a painting. They have a picture in their head and the only way they can see if they can portray their thoughts in an image is to just do it. I feel that the paintings express my thoughts and feelings, but when I organized my images I wanted them to show in the opposite order. I did not know that I would not be able to rearrange the order. I wanted the impact of Lara Birchler's monologue to start the art show just as the subject matter is the beginning of motherhood. I wanted the viewer to gain respect for the woman's body, soul, and mind before exploring the intimate feelings of pregnancy and motherhood. I feel all, men and woman, should gain an appreciation for the unique qualities of the most intimate part of woman in order to appreciate the images. 

I feel a curator has the ability to set the mood of a gallery. There are several artists with many different styles and techniques. Choosing what to display and the artists to use, you must be knowledgeable about the background of the artist, the different views in society, and use a variety of mediums, techniques and styles. I like that the curator can display images that have their own unique story behind the collection of art.


I chose a popular theme for artwork and it was easy to find work by artists that explained experiences of motherhood. The image of motherhood has been widely painted due to the intimate nature. I appreciate the different views of how motherhood is viewed in the eyes of another.  Although, I feel my experience connects more to Amanda Greavette, a natural nesting experience, I can also relate and understand the feelings that is portrayed in Damien Hirst's sculpture,  a more mechanical process.

Introductory

Motherhood Art Gallery
An online art show

 Curated by Wendy Stephens for Miramar College Art 100

Featuring a variety of artists that elicit feelings of connection, excitement, defeat, and appreciation of the motherhood experience.

You will explore a few of the feelings that mothers feel before and during motherhood through a variety of techniques, mediums, and style. The media of video art is used to express the feelings of acceptance and appreciation. Conventional mediums such as oil paint, tempura paint, and pastels using different techniques and styles such as realism, impressionism, and Japanese influence will be explored. Some of the Three dimensional sculptures using mixed media, precious metals, and marble showing the subtractive and additive process will be displayed. Digital photographs will display the powerful views of society and the effects. You will be taken on a tour of cool and warm colors, bold lines and light brushstrokes, and the illusion of time and motion. The artists use focal points and emphasis, balance and rhythm, distortion of scale, and proportion as principles of design in many of the art pieces being viewed.

I hope you enjoy the artwork picked for this gallery. It is the feelings and emotions I feel when I think of my experience of motherhood.  

Exhibition Introduction



Welcome to the Motherhood Art gallery. Here you will be taken on a trip of emotions, connections, hassles, insecurities, and bonds that many mothers feel through the eyes of a variety of artists. This show will start with the intimate bonds between mother and child and end with the raw emotional insecurities many woman have experienced about their bodies. First, you will experience the connection between a mother and her child in an intimate painting by Mary Cassatt of a daily routine of combing a child’s hair. Then, Ron Mueck captures the raw feelings, emotions, and defeat of motherhood in his realistic sculpture of a mother accomplishing her daily chores. Ivette Ivens explores the current issues of discrimination, social harassment, and unwelcoming feelings of breastfeeding in society today. In the first several months of motherhood, a mother may lose sight of the bond, connection, and tender moments of breastfeeding and feel like the milkmaid depicted in Paul Gauguin’s painting. Rogier van der Weyden expresses the long traveled road of exhaustion and the connection between mothers experiencing life within them. Keith Haring’s ambiguity of bold colors and dancing lines deliver a message of ritual or excitement of motherhood. Marc Quinn demonstrates that the love of a mother is bigger than her arms in his sculpture of Alison Lapper, a disabled pregnant woman. Next, Damien Hirst will display a more mechanical process of preparation to motherhood. His sculpture may appeal to those who may have to work by insemination or following a strict calendar in order to become pregnant. Then, you will visit Amanda Greavette’s painting of a mother creating her nest to prepare herself for the rest of her life of nurturing, caring for, and loving her baby. Her painting is of natural raw emotions of pregnancy. Finally, Lara Birchler will greet you with, A YoniVerse Monologue. Here you will gain an appreciation for the flower of life, your Yoni, that is the beginning of the experience of motherhood.

Exhibit tour includes:
Mary Cassatt- Mother Combing Her Child's Hair
Ron Mueck- Woman with Shopping
Ivette Ivens- Breastfeeding Moms
Paul Gauguin- The Milkmaid
Rogier van Weyden-Visitation
Keith Haring- Fertility #1
Marc Quinn- Alison Lapper Pregnant
Damien Hirst- The Virgin Mother
Amanda Greavette- Under the Moon
Lara Birchler- A YoniVerse Monologue and pregnant belly casts.


Sunday, December 11, 2016

Mother Combing Her Child's Hair by Mary Cassatt

Mary Cassatt (American, 1844-1926). Mother Combing Her Child's Hair, ca. 1901. 
Pastel on gray paper, 25 1/4 x 31 5/8 in. (64.1 x 80.3 cm). 
Brooklyn Museum, Bequest of Mary T. Cockcroft, 46.102 (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 46.102_SL1.jpg)

"I have touched with a sense of art some people - they felt the love and the life. Can you offer me anything to compare that to the joy for an artist?" ~Mary Cassatt

Biography:
Mary Stevenson Cassatt was born in America in an upper-middle-class family. Her father was a successful stockbroker, and her mother belonged to a prosperous banking family. In 1851 through 1855, Mary gained exposure to European arts and culture during their stay in France and Germany. 
In 1860, at the age of 16, Cassatt began two years of study at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. In 1865, she asked her parents to let her continue her artistic training abroad. Her parents allowed her to move to Paris where she studied with Jean Leon Gerome. 
Ager a brief return to the United States from 1870 through 1871, during which she was frustrated by a lack of artistic resources and opportunities, she set out again for Paris. In the early 1870's she also traveled to Spain, Italy, and Haolland, where she familiarized herself with the work of such artists as Diego Velazquez, Peter Paul Rubens, and Antonio da Correggio. 
By 1874 Cassatt had established herself in a studio in Paris. Three years later, her parents and her sister Lydia joined her in France. Her family frequently served as models for her work of the late 1870's and 1880's, which included many images of contemporary women altho theater and the opera, in gardens and parlors. 
In 1877, Edgar Degas invited Cassatt to join the group of independent artists known as the Impressionists. Working close with Degas she was able to socialize with other fellow artists in this circle such as Camille Pissarro, Berthe Morisot. 
Cassatt exhibited her work with the Impressionists in Paris from 1879 onwards, and in 1886 she was included in the first major exhibition of Impressionst art in the United States, held at the Durand-Ruel galleries in New York. 
By the 1880's, Cassat was particularly well known for her sensitive depictions of mothers and children. These works, like all her portrayals of women, may have achieved such popular success for a specific reason: they filled a societal need to idealize women's domestic roles at a time when many women were, in fact, beginning to take an interest in voting rights, dress reform, higher education, and social equality. 
Cassatt never married or had children, choosing instead to dedicate her entire life to her artistic profession. Bertha Honore Palmer, a businesswoman and philanthropist invited Cassatt to paint a mural for the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition and felt that "women should be someone and not something."
After 1900, Cassatt suffered from failing health and deteriorating eyesight. In 1904, Cassatt as recognized for her cultural contributions by French government, which awarded her the order of Chevalier of the Legion d'honneur. 
By 1914, Cassatt eyesight worsened and was no longer able to work, although she continued to exhibit her art in exhibitions including the Suffrage Loan Exhibition of Old Master and Works by Edgar Degas and Mary Cassat at the Knoedler Galleries in New Yourk in 1915. She died in in Le Mesnil-Theribus, fifty miles northwest of Paris on June 14, 1926.

Artist Statement:
In the late 19th century, Impressionist painting was the avant-garde style coming out of Paris. This style explored the formal qualities of color and light through loose brushwork and open compositions. Yet Impressionists painters, such as Edgar Degas and Edouard Manet, were not just painting pretty pictures. They depicted contemporary urban life in Paris, and the subject matter scandalized art patrons who were more accustomed to classical scenes.
Among the notable painters of this movement, there was one woman– an American woman, Mary Cassatt. As the daughter of a wealthy family, Cassatt was able to attend the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts to pursue her career. But she grew tired of drawing from plaster casts and set off toward Paris in search of a new, less traditional education. She permanently settled in Paris, and in 1877 was invited by Degas to show with the Impressionists. Of similar disposition and painterly inclination, Cassatt’s rejection of the academy made her an easy fit into the Impressionist scene.
Cassatt is most famously known for her mother and child paintings. The Wichita Art Museum holds an exemplary painting by Cassatt, simply titled “Mother and Child.” Cassatt devoted many canvases to this relationship, but in this painting, viewers can see that she does not elevate the status of the pair through religious or divine iconography. Instead, she reveals the quieter moments of beauty exchanged between mothers and their children. Commonplace, ordinary, yet captivating, Cassatt’s ability to convey these intensely private moments through an exquisite painterly technique places her as a key figure of American Impressionism.

Art Elements:
Cassatt uses a light color palette and loose brushwork of Impressionism and is influenced by Japanese art, as well as by European Old Masters. Impressionists are some of the most significant, and among the most popular artists in the history of art. Impressionism suggests a lack of realism and realistic representation was the standard of the day. Cassatt was not fond of the likes of realistic art and joined the Impressionist artists who had common philosophies about painting. They studied the dramatic effects of atmosphere and light on people and objects. They attempted to duplicate the visual phenomena of colors being altered by different lighting effects on canvas through a varied palette. They use a combination of colors to make shadows instead of black and gray. Her choice in color allows the emphasis of the painting to be the emotions being displayed through the subjects of the painting. 

Connection:
I chose "Mother Combing Her Child's Hair" because Cassatt captures mothers and children  in everyday moments in an insightful display of motherhood. Her ability to capture the connection of mother and a child in her paintings are profound. The use of soft coloration allows the viewer to concentrate on the subject of the scene and the close relationship between the mother and child in her paintings. Their intimacy is demonstrated by the way the mother holds the child's face as she combs through the knots in the child's hair, and the comfort of the way the child fold's her hand on her lap. This painting displays the daily routines a mother endures with her daughter and captures the emotions of the activity.