91制片厂

漏 2025 91制片厂

1375 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44115
(216) 916-6100 | (877) 399-3307

WKSU is a public media service licensed to and operated by 91制片厂.
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

See inside 'Picturing Motherhood Now' at the Cleveland Museum of Art

"Still You Bloom in This Land of No Gardens," by Njideka Akunyili Crosby as seen in the exhibit "Picturing Motherhood Now" at the Cleveland Museum of Art.
A Black mother and child rest among plant life

The Cleveland Museum of Art holds centuries of art depicting motherhood, perhaps most commonly seen through works of the Virgin Mary and child. Looking through this museum鈥檚 collection, two contemporary art curators wondered how artists depict motherhood today.

The resulting exhibition, 鈥 ,鈥 presents the varied ways mothering shows up in art, from raising children to fighting for future generations, while intentionally highlighting diverse creators and work.

鈥淲e鈥檙e interested in bringing in voices and perspectives and subjects that have not always been prominently featured throughout the history of art,鈥 said Emily Liebert, curator of contemporary art at the museum.

The first room in the show, called 鈥淢issing Pictures,鈥 focuses on such representation. One piece, for instance, depicts a mother and daughter who are undocumented immigrants. Another painting, shows two Black women holding babies that appear as white silhouettes on their laps.

"Not My Burden" by Titus Kaphar as seen in "Picturing Motherhood Now" at the Cleveland Museum of Art. [Carrie Wise / 91制片厂]

鈥淒o they stand for the white children that Black women have historically cared for? Or do they stand for the children of the mothers and therefore represent children who have been taken too soon from their mothers?鈥 Liebert said. 鈥淚 think that the painting leaves it open for either one of these or many other interpretations.鈥

The exhibit goes beyond imagery of mothers and children and presents motherhood much more broadly.

鈥淚t became a really interesting lens to reflect on our daily lives and the present that we inhabit,鈥 Liebert said.

Photography by LaToya Ruby Frazier documents families dealing with the lead water crisis in Flint, Michigan.

Photography by LaToya Ruby Frazier as seen in "Picturing Motherhood Now" at the Cleveland Museum of Art. [Carrie Wise / 91制片厂]

鈥淪he used three generations of women to talk about an ecological crisis, as well as social justice, looking at the way that that crisis impacted different people in different ways, taking in particular a toll on low income families and people of color,鈥 Liebert said.

Cleveland artist M. Carmen Lane demonstrates 鈥済iving birth to an organization鈥 through their photography, said Nadiah Rivera Fellah, associate curator of contemporary art at the museum.

Lane has six pieces in the exhibition which tell the story of turning a house in the Buckeye-Shaker neighborhood of Cleveland into a center for creativity and healing called ATNSC (pronounced Ata-en-sic).

Photography by M. Carmen Lane as seen in "Picturing Motherhood Now" at the Cleveland Museum of Art. [Carrie Wise / 91制片厂]

Another work Rivera Fellah said she鈥檚 excited about sharing in the exhibit is by indigenous artist Wendy Red Star.

鈥淪he created this really wonderful commission for the work that is a portrait of her great-great-grandmother, herself and her daughter, so kind of call[ing] attention to the way that the culture is passed down through the women in the family,鈥 Rivera Fellah said.

"Amn铆a (Echo)" by Wendy Red Star as seen in "Picturing Motherhood Now" at the Cleveland Museum of Art. [Carrie Wise / 91制片厂]

While most of the artists featured in the exhibition are women, the show also includes non-binary and male perspectives on motherhood.

鈥淚 think it's a subject that any artist has access to and any visitor has access to,鈥 Liebert said. 鈥淲e really hope that anyone who comes into this exhibit finds some point of connection, finds an entry point, finds something that speaks to them and their experience and maybe learns something that they hadn't thought of previously.鈥

鈥淧icturing Motherhood Now鈥 is on view through March 2022.

Carrie Wise is the deputy editor of arts and culture at 91制片厂.