“I will never be a mother” said the artist.

 

‘To be a feminist mother continues to mean temporarily losing one’s soul connection to one’s work and one’s self in order to give love and care to the new other. For some feminist mothers, this also mean allowing one’s self to become completely absorbed by the mystery and inexplicable joy that the infant brings. Sometimes these desires merge: passion for one’s baby or one’s child(ren) opens up new perspectives and forms of being and living. Oftentimes the mother’s desires collide with her artist self’. (Liss 2009)

At 24 weeks pregnant I waded, bump in toe, into a feeding ground for artists. The art exhibition was the first I had attended since the discovery of my little sprog and the first time I was faced with many former tutors and peers. I wore a sheer white dress that loosely draped over my swollen breasts and huge (in hindsight I didn’t know the meaning of huge at this point) bulge, attempting to retain some of my feminine style and elegance. I was greeted by swooning friends and delighted rubs of the belly, although deep down I imagined everyone was thinking the same, she could have been a good artist, what a waste. I was weighed down by my identity as a mother, sentenced by the institution to live out my days selflessly, suffocating what was left of my former artist self. Ultimately, I felt embarrassed.

Perhaps this was a hormonal overreaction, but this accusation didn’t arrive from nowhere. It stems from the repressed image of the maternal in contemporary art. Cultural stereotypes show the image of the mother as all-nurturing, all-forgiving, all-sacrificing, whilst the image of the artist represents all-powerful, all-dominant, all-successful (wo)man. So how can you possibly be both? In his 1938 novel Enemies of Promise Cyril Connolly proclaimed that ‘there is no more sombre enemy of good art than the pram in the hall’. An infamous quote that has no doubt resonated deeply within contemporary culture and so despite feminist activism in the 1960’s, motherhood still remains relatively uncharted territory. With the emergence of shared parental leave and abundance of child care options and working mothers, institutions may be forced to accept the presence of artist-mothers, but we are still a long way off equality. What is the point of artist-mothers acceptance if our work is still considered second class. Must we omit our child(ren), or any essence of motherhood, from our work in order to succeed? Why is drawing from the complex experiences of motherhood seen as cliche? Irrefutably work which challenges the pre-conceived image of the mother should be celebrated.

For a short while I fell out of love with art and the institutions which control it for making me feel that way about the daughter I adored so much.

The institutionalised perception of the mother is continuing to thwart artists from having children, stealing their most fertile years. Through acknowledgement of this and emergence of the feminist mother that Liss refers to as, ‘the one that can be nurturing, caring, loving and sacrificing but not at the expense of losing ourselves’ can we not argue for a transformation from the separation of artist and mother. I’m a mother, but I’m also an artist, a photographer, a researcher and a writer. I can be powerful (god, every woman who gives birth is powerful!), nurturing, dominant, forgiving and I accept that the mother in me often collides with the artist in me. Being a mother is an endless labour and it is ok to want to give yourself wholly to your child but, and to refer (for the last time) back to Liss: ‘What distinguishes the feminist mother from the patriarchal model of the mother is that the feminist mother struggles to break the yoke of centuries of expectation’.

 

#makeartmama

Since venturing into the intimidating world of Instagram to promote my business, I’ve been overwhelmed by the sheer talent and communities I have discovered. (As I am also undertaking a masters degree) It has been enough to divert my research path in order to incorporate these inspiring communities of practice, and I have decided to create and facilitate my own community. A community of artist-mothers who will encourage and respond to each others work, discuss how we do both- how or if motherhood informs and changes our art-making, and how we engage with the outside art-world.

I have recently been invited into the homes of new families at what I think may be their most vulnerable time in their lives. As a photographer,  I go in hoping to capture the raw, honest moments of new parents. I find it amazing because, I see myself just one year prior. Those first moments which are clouded with exhaustion, sore milk-filled boobs and a healing body are also replaced so quickly by confidence, strength and thankfully, independence again. I find myself wanting to comfort the new mothers- I want to hug them and say try and enjoy these moments! Don’t panic when you struggle with breast-feeding, don’t break down and cry because you haven’t been able to have a shower today or you’ve tried 3 times to get out of the house and each time was a failed attempt. It gets so much easier! And you can do this. Believe me, we’ve all been there.

Just to highlight some of the major fears that were circling through my mind in those long first weeks:

-My body was ruined.

-I won’t be able to keep breastfeeding so I am a bad mother.

-My baby might stop breathing.

-When was my stomach going to go down?

-Can you die from lack of sleep?

-Is her belly button infected?

-Will I ever be able to go the toilet normally again?

As you can see, art-making never really crossed my mind, I felt for so long that I couldn’t do both, that my pregnant fears had come true and I had to choose between being an artist and a mother. I do regret not making more art at such a pivotal time and now I am continuously trying to relive those moments through other new parents. Documenting and reflecting is vital to us practitioners. Let’s keep going.

I’m inviting you to make art mama!

Follow @belleartphotography #makeartmama

4 months on.

 

I remember one of my biggest worries throughout pregnancy was completely losing my figure. Looking back  at the first image, I was 37 weeks pregnant with 4 weeks of growing left, completely in disbelief at how far my stomach could stretch. I’m sure it’s a very common concern, because although you’re creating a human and should be overwhelmed by the miracle of life and so on, you still want to resemble you after. You still want to feel like yourself. And so these worries went round and round in my head until I gave birth and they became a reality.

I remember standing in the mirror of the hospital bathroom, hours after giving birth, poking my sagging, wobbly belly thinking how the bloody hell is this going to go down. But miraculously..it does, eventually. I remember avoiding mirrors for the first few weeks, cringing every time I looked down in the shower. I scrutinised and criticised each tiny stretch mark and cried a little bit everyday (although I’m pretty sure that was hormone induced). On the other side though, I was /am completely in awe of my body, for making, carrying and giving birth to something so beautiful. And it really is worth every blemish. After 4 months, my body is not exactly how it was, nor will it ever be. But I only have to glance at Belle and I don’t care.

 

 

Mother’s Day

image

I look at this photograph on my mantelpiece everyday. It’s of me, just a bit older than my daughter, holding onto my mothers leg because I didn’t want her to go to work. Now I look at those big blue eyes and all I see is my daughter. It makes me sad to look at this photograph, because I know what the future holds for this beautiful relationship. But i’m not sad for the child. Because although life is hard without her mother and not a single day passes by when she doesn’t wish she was here, It’s her mother that’s missed it all. I’m sad when I look at this photograph because only now do I realise how much she loved me. I’m sad because, I can’t imagine not being able to watch Belle grow, missing her graduate, meeting her soul mate, having her own child. All the things and many more that my mother wasn’t here to see. So this mother’s day i’m not sad for myself. For the first time in 4 years I haven’t tortured myself with painful memories of loss, and jealousy for others indulging in their mothers. But i’m sad for her that she wasn’t there to watch me play with my daughter, see me be a mother and witness our incredible bond. And, I’m sad that she will never hear the word Grandma.

But i’ll show her this photograph on my mantelpiece. And I’ll tell her all I know. I’ll tell her how she was a gift from her. A way of saying, I’m sorry I left you.

A year in colour.

It was around this time last year that I stared in disbelief at the pregnancy test. The vibrant blue lines forever imprinted on my memory. I can laugh about it now, but at the time I was shitting my pants. Now its funny because I look at my small angelic human and think how absolutely un-terrifying she actually is. Its sounds incredibly cliché that parenthood comes naturally and as you awkwardly wipe that first lot of poo from your infants bum, the term natural doesn’t enter into your brain-but eventually you become a pro. I titled this post A year in colour because thats exactly what it has been. I look at my daughter and I see the bluest eyes, the pinkest cheeks, and the yellowest poos known to man. No but really, as I reflected on this time last year, post-baby, I can honestly say that it seems much duller. As if, life before Belle was just a bit greyer.

Its one of the reasons I started to paint again. And at first I was hesitant. I used to consider myself a painter..until art school yanked the brush out of my hand, stomped on my canvases and gave me a camera (not literally). Now I feel like a born again virgin when it comes to holding a brush. But i’ve blown the cobwebs from my easel because I feel like I need to. I was at a loss with my camera, torn between wanting to create images that explore ideas of the maternal but at the same time not wanting to exploit my daughter, or subject her in ways I have myself. And theres only so many times in a woman’s life that she wants to strip off and pose in front of a camera.

A year of self-reflection

I wanted to draw your attention back to this post:

My Child’s Daughter

As I stared, stunned, at the two lines, my thoughts drifted to my own mother. I was a planned child, a glimmer of hope and new beginnings. I thought of the last moments I saw her. I thought of the pain, both mine and hers. The look of helplessness clouded over with the hopeless worries of a mother for her child. I held her hand until she told me to go. And I looked back as she kissed her hand and waved. I left her with the promise to return. She died that night.

And so there in that tiny bathroom I knew. These two blue lines that came so unexpectantly into my life, were actually not a new beginning but instead a long waited return. I laughed. My shaky hands cradled the two blue lines as I showed them to him. We do have a choice. No we don’t. It’s a non-negotiable deal. It’s her.

There are religions that believe firmly in reincarnation, the transformation of old souls into new life. I can’t say I do. But nor can I say I don’t. However I couldn’t write a blog about motherhood without writing about my own. A woman who suffered. Who spent her life bringing new life into the world and who gave her own to bring her 5 children into the world. A huge influence in my life; my morals, my decisions and my work. She’s an inspiration to overcome the pain and grief of her passing, and the pain and worries of motherhood.

However, the sad truth is that all that influence and inspiration fails to make an appearance when I need it most – amidst the chaos of progesterone – which can turn me into a massive emotional pain in the arse. It’s only after, when I sit and reflect, I calmly imagine her advice and guidance. And then I laugh to myself as I realise I’m imagining some godly-peaceful-figure, she was never a saint herself and I’ve gained many of her traits. She made many mistakes in her short life, she wasn’t perfect, but she was mine, and I loved her. I still do.

I remember someone told me once that losing their father was so difficult to deal with, and it wasn’t until their own son was born, that they could come to terms with it. I always wondered how. It can’t be a replacement, surely not, but it can heal a hole perhaps. Or maybe it’s more about understanding. My mother comes into my mind every day now. I don’t think my daughter can replace her, that by becoming a mother myself, I’ll lose the need for one myself. But perhaps I can then understand her. People say that a love a mother has for her child is incomparable by any standards, so perhaps I can understand the way she loved me and even the choices she made in the end.

No, I don’t believe that she is the midwife, only that without her I wouldn’t have my two blue lines. And that 50 years to the very day of her birth, my daughter will arrive.

 

 

*

That was a year ago now that I held those two blue lines in my shaky hands. I realise I haven’t wrote much about my own mother since, and especially not since the birth of my daughter. It’s amazing that I was very nearly right. I went into labour on the very day my mum would have turned 50 years old. If labour was kind, I would have given birth to her that night as well. Truth be told, I’m glad she wasn’t. My mum left our lives so quickly, without so much as a goodbye or any deep, meaningful advice for the rest of our lives. In a flash she was gone. And all that was left were a few lipsticks, some Chanel perfume and her memory. But now I also have my little family. I don’t really know what I believe in terms of God or spirituality, although I am still quite sure that Belle was a gift. A way of saying i’m sorry I left you. Because being a mother myself now, I can’t imagine putting my daughter through the same grief and pain I went through. Although she can’t yet understand me, I tell her about my mum and I tell her that I will be here for her as long as I can, I’ll watch her grow up and get married and eventually have children of her own. I wrote above about how through becoming a mother, I would understand my own. In some ways I do, I understand how much she loved us. How it must have broken her heart to leave us, so much so that she stopped fighting and gave up. It’s sad though, because she never really lost us. She should have been my midwife, and she should of held my daughter. Belle should know who she is and call her Grandma. And even though her picture sits central in our living room and I talk about her. Belle will never know her and she will never know Belle.

3 months on.

I was having a chat with some artist friends recently and I felt propelled to share my recent demotivation to make art. Whilst I still have the desire to write, my daughter has become the complete focal point of my life and so I’ve become disinterested to make work surrounding the maternal body. This is because, my plans involved photographing myself alongside my daughter. And when I look at her beautiful chubby cheeks and big round eyes gazing up at me, I can’t bring myself to subject her in ways I do myself. I don’t want to exploit my daughter in the name of art. I was adamant I wouldn’t let motherhood completely overshadow everything else in my life. In hindsight that was stupid, because whose child doesn’t become their whole world. And to be honest, It’s great. I created her! And nothing else I ever make will be as wonderful. So I want to spend most of my time watching her grow; its amazing to hear her first giggle (as I did today when I accidentally tickled under her arm whilst changing her) and see her huge smiles as i’m changing her nappy. I don’t even mind that Arif and I’s conversations evolve around poo a good 70% of the time. Now my outlook on life has completely changed. Whilst I was once disinterested in money and wanted to make art for the purpose of enjoying making art, happy to work part time in a restaurant. Now I want a career, and a good salary. Because I really want to be able to support my family.

Perhaps even a year ago, as I was blissfully unaware of the life inside me drinking Jaegermeister out of the bottle at a German art exhibition, I would have recoiled at the idea of settling down. But now i’m sat in Newcastle, baby asleep on my lap, watching the river out of the window on a couch that I own and I couldn’t be happier with my life (actually I could if I had more money). I picture our family expanding (really slowly), seeing the world, drinking all the fine wine and eating all the fine food (Belle can’t have the wine for a wee while). Meanwhile, Laura Mulvey and her gender theory books can go and gather some dust for all I care.

The best of me

It’s a relationship that starts out so completely one-sided, never have I given so much of myself and desired so little in return. It’s been an incredible roller coaster of a year, with hormonal crescendos and emotional whirlwinds. But now as I lie with my baby nestled into my chest, I can honestly say, she is my most amazing creation yet. I still stare at her in disbelief. And I wish that everyone will have a chance to feel the incomparable deep love that I feel for her. But it doesn’t stop there, because what comes with such love is overwhelming fear that I would ever have to live a day without her. In just a matter of weeks she has formed a part of me so huge that nothing could ever replace. So there’s a permanent sick feeling in the pit of my stomach that I doubt will ever go away.

The first weeks with belle were undoubtedly some of the toughest of my life. I felt like i had been hit by a huge double-decker bus. No one really gives you information on what happens after the birth. Every show is built up to that glorious moment-omitting the somewhat gruesome aftermath of post-natal recovery. I was completely drawn into the beautiful advertisements of breastfeeding, aware that breast is of course best -however I must say that the reality of it, is somewhat different to the images of glowing mothers with their happy babes suckling at their chest that the NHS throw at you. The initial reality is a screaming purple-faced baby who wont latch on, horrifically swollen breasts and dry bleeding nipples. Not to mention how much it absolutely drains your body of every last bit of energy remaining after the birth. I lasted the best part of 4 weeks at it. And at the time I felt so awfully guilty to fill my child with dreaded formula- thanks to the pressure on women to breastfeed. It was only after I realised how little that meant in the whole scheme of parenting. Belle is growing, she’s happy and contented…and now I’m also happy and so much more relaxed.

I’ve learnt so much in these last 10 weeks of being a mother, and the most important lesson of all, is to take that huge rulebook of how to be a good parent given by most midwives, health visitors and family and just throw it out the window. Or burn it. Because it is absolutely useless. I imagine each baby is so different, each one so demanding-and you will do anything imaginable just to get a few more hours sleep.

As for my art, In that book I mentioned in my first post, It asks different artists if they need a space away to work. Well my answer is most definitely yes. My daughter is my biggest inspiration but also my biggest distraction. She’s the best reason to make work but I can’t make anything when she is there. I can’t even visit galleries with her-believe me I have tried. I need a space to breathe sometimes. It’s amazing how much good a couple of hours away from motherly duties can do. I sometimes find myself sauntering out of the house, baby-free, thinking-wow so this is what independence feels like….Until i go to reach for my purse and out drops a nappy. Just a slight reminder that I will never quite be free, I’m a mother.