logo
How motherhood is being reframed in art

How motherhood is being reframed in art

CNN27-05-2025
In Caroline Walker's 2022 painting 'Bottles and Pumps', various breastfeeding paraphernalia lies drying on a white tray. 'That's been an interesting one, in terms of how people have responded,' she wrote to CNN over email, relaying the painting's reception as part of 'Acts of Creation: On Art and Motherhood', a touring group show curated by art critic Hettie Judah. 'It was the painting men responded to most when it was first shown (at Stephen Friedman Gallery in London), with (their) memories of bottle feeds or being tasked with cleaning and sterilizing the apparatus in those strange first months with a new baby,' said Walker.
The work was initially produced as part of 'Lisa', a series of paintings capturing Walker's sister-in-law in the weeks immediately before, and three months after, giving birth.
At The Hepworth Wakefield gallery in the north of England, pieces from 'Lisa' join other artworks by the Scottish artist in a major new solo show, titled 'Mothering,' in an intimate survey of early motherhood and the extended support network that helps new mothers navigate the experience — from midwives and cleaners, to grandmothers and childcare workers. The show includes work made during Walker's 2021 artist's residency at a London hospital maternity ward ('Birth Reflections') and depicting her young daughter's nursery ('Nurture').
''Mothering' felt like an expansive title that could describe acts of care, which weren't limited to the relationship between biological mother and child, reflecting the wide range of people who become part of our lives in the early years of childhood,' shared Walker, reflecting on the deliberate reframing of how motherhood is characterized and tethering it to the socio-economic structures of labor she has previously studied. 'I liked that the term is a verb describing the act of providing care and nurture, rather than a specific identity or fixed relationship.'
The theme of motherhood has been a core focus for artists for centuries, though it is often with men in the role of the author, rendering scenes they only know secondhand. See Gustav Klimt's 'The Three Ages of Women', or Caravaggio's controversial 'Madonna and Child with St. Anne (Dei Palafrenieri)' — indeed, the many depictions of the Madonna and Child make it perhaps the most widely celebrated and frequently circulated image in the genre of mother and children in art.
For Walker however, it wasn't always an obvious subject matter. 'Motherhood wasn't a preoccupation for me, so I wasn't looking for it in the world around me,' she said. 'I've always been drawn to images of women in painting. Some of course were depictions of motherhood, but it wasn't something I was especially drawn to.'
'My work is very routed in a Western painting tradition and frequently references, directly and indirectly, specific genres,' Walker continued, 'but I try to approach these through a contemporary female lens, asking if the perspective of a woman artist can add something different.' In Walker's own research, she found a sense of commonality in the work of Impressionist painters Mary Cassatt and Berthe Morisot; 'The Wet Nurse Angele Feeding Julie Manet', made by Morisot in 1880, in particular shares a dialogue with her own perspective.
'The relationship of exchange that's at play in the painting really interests me. Morisot is paying another woman to nurture her child, so she can work and make that exchange the subject of the work itself,' Walker explained, referencing the balancing act that has commonly been an obstacle for women who are parents, especially working-class individuals and those from marginalized communities, generally and also within creative industries, where income is typically less stable. 'I've been thinking a lot about the relationship between paid and unpaid care and the transactional nature of nurseries and paid childcare, a service we rely on as a society and which I myself utilize.'
'Mothering' then, in title and content, stretches the typical narrative and asks the viewer to revise how we might imagine motherhood to be presented creatively, building on the vast visual library constructed by women artists over the last century. Louise Bourgeois for example, whose 'Maman' sculpture recently returned to London's Tate Modern, frequently interrogated ideas about motherhood and maternity in her work, while Alice Neel often painted mothers and their children informed, in some part, by her own understanding of the relationship (in an early piece from 1930, she fused her own story with the Virgin Mary's, producing 'Degenerate Madonna').
In photography too, these roles and the associated rituals have regularly been a vehicle for expression, from Carrie Mae Weems's 'Kitchen Table Series', featuring a mother and daughter make-up session, to Rineke Dijkstra's 'New Mothers', wherein the photographer documented women and their hours-old newborns. In 2020, the American photographer Maggie Shannon began accompanying midwives on home visits for what would become 'Extreme Pain, Extreme Joy', an echo of Walker's hospital residency. And in 2023, Andi Galdi Vinko's 'Sorry I Gave Birth I Disappeared But Now I'm Back', a confronting but ultimately warm account of the first years of motherhood, won the UK's Kraszna-Krausz Foundation Photography Book Award.
While hardly a new arena, in 2025 it seems there is a considerable effort, as part of a wider campaign of awareness and correction, to foreground these artists, just as women artists more broadly have begun to receive their flowers. The volume of interest in Walker's work is a prime example of this. In addition to 'Mothering', her paintings are currently on display in three group shows: the Scottish leg of 'Acts of Creation' at Dundee Contemporary Arts, 'Good Mom/Bad Mom' at Centraal Museum in Utrecht, and at Dussedorf's Kunstpalast in 'MAMA: From Mary to Merkel'.
I liked that the term is a verb describing the act of providing care and nurture, rather than a specific identity or fixed relationship.
Artist Caroline Walker
In 'Mothering: The Family Reborn', the closing chapter of a Thames & Hudson publication that accompanies Judah's 'Acts of Creation' exhibition, the critic celebrates the notion of mothering as perceived by queer artists, oftentimes in a political context, exploring how 'committing to networks of care' and a broader sense of shared responsibility has previously been, and has the potential to, further comprise modern iterations of motherhood. Here, she references artists such as Sadie Lune, Zanele Muholi and Cathy Cade.
In Walker's case, the term mothering arrived via a member of the team at her daughter's nursery, who explained that it was a key part of their training. Subsequently, Walker said she began reflecting on 'the constellation of women that are part of my children's care and education, performing vital work and informing a period of a child's life, which research has shown is important to their development throughout childhood and beyond.'
'I had been exploring the subject of women's working lives for a few years but becoming a mother really opened my eyes to this whole area of women's labor in relation to the bearing and rearing of children,' Walker continued. 'Women artists have been responding to the demands of motherhood for decades but haven't always enjoyed the same exposure or validation. If I was making this work 10 years ago, I don't think it would be getting so much traction.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

This mom went viral for co-parenting with ChatGPT. Thousands are following her lead
This mom went viral for co-parenting with ChatGPT. Thousands are following her lead

Fast Company

time38 minutes ago

  • Fast Company

This mom went viral for co-parenting with ChatGPT. Thousands are following her lead

Ask any parent and they'll tell you that the laundry list of daily tasks is relentless. Now, some are turning to a new kind of support system: artificial intelligence. One mom has recently gone viral on TikTok for 'co-parenting' her child with the help of ChatGPT. Lilian Schmidt, a corporate brand strategist based in Zurich, Switzerland, began sharing her AI prompts earlier this year. Since then, she's built a community of over 21,000 followers who swear by her tips for navigating the highs and lows of parenthood. Schmidt has a partner, but with both working full-time, she found herself increasingly burnt out by the mental load of parenting their three-year-old. So she turned to ChatGPT. Whether it's generating imaginative bedtime stories, creating cleaning schedules, offering advice on sleep regressions, or planning meals based on what's in the fridge, the AI helped her offload the logistics of parenting—freeing her up to simply be present with her daughter. 'I feel like I'm cheating at mom life,' she wrote in one post. @heylilianschmidt If this is your vibe, I wanna be friends! 🫶 And if you want this kind of life, but don't know how or where to start – 💬 COMMENT 'life' and I'll give you 7 of my best ChatGPT prompts to get you started! 🫶 #livingourbestlife #motheranddaughter #momlifevibes #sahmtok #toddlermoms #chatgpt #chatgptformoms ♬ As It Was – Harry Styles Parental stress, the U.S. Surgeon General warned earlier this year, is a public health crisis. Parents are consistently more likely than other adults to report high levels of stress, so it's no surprise that many are seeking creative solutions to manage the load. 'ChatGPT literally helped me with breastfeeding, and how to decorate my daughter birthday cake,' one commenter wrote under Schmidt's video. 'Chat gpt is carrying the weight of my family at this point,' another added. @heylilianschmidt HERE'S EXACTLY HOW I GOT HERE👇 This is the version of mom life I used to think was impossible. I took me 3 years to get here, because nothing worked: 🚫 Waking up before the kids 🚫 Ruthless declutterring 🚫 Having a new routine Whatever I tried, the mental load was still there – stressing me out and preventing me from being fully present with my kids and enjoying our little life 😢 Until I thought: what if someone (or something) could carry the mental load FOR me? I started playing around with ChatGPT – and it didn't just become a tool. It became my mom assistant, my co-parent, my second brain when mine's filled with cotton candy and empty batteries 🪫 Wanna try and see for yourself? 🎁 COMMENT 'prompts' to get my free AI Mom Magic Starter Kit with 7 ChatGPT prompts I use every single week to save time, stay sane, and make everyday life feel more ✨magical✨ (or grab it straight from my bio!) Your motherhood gets to feel like this, too 🫶 #wokeuplikethis #morningroutine #toddlermom #mentalload #chatgpt #chatgptformoms #momhacks ♬ inside out theme – Santiago Melo With 2.5 billion prompts made every day in ChatGPT, according to a recent Axios scoop, each day users are coming up with new ways AI can slot into their daily lives, from therapist, to stylist, to co-parent. But not everyone is on board with AI-assisted parenting. 'Is it just me, or is it a problem that women feel relief turning to AI instead of their partners?' one commenter asked. Others raised concerns about the environmental cost of AI, and what that might mean for the next generation.

William & Kate Reportedly Looking into Moving After Rumors Harry & Meghan Are Relocating Back to the UK
William & Kate Reportedly Looking into Moving After Rumors Harry & Meghan Are Relocating Back to the UK

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

William & Kate Reportedly Looking into Moving After Rumors Harry & Meghan Are Relocating Back to the UK

Prince William and Kate Middleton may be on the move again three years after relocating from Kensington Palace to Adelaide Cottage on the Windsor Estate. According to The Daily Mail, William and Kate—along with their three kids: Prince George, Princess Charlotte, and Prince Louis—are looking to move into the 'magnificent gothic revival mansion' of Fort Belvedere, which is 'nestled in a hidden corner of Windsor Great Park' and sits on 59 acres. The 18th-century home also has a tennis court, a private outdoor swimming pool, a rose garden, a greenhouse, private stables, multiple lakes, and three cottages for the Prince and Princess of Wales' staff. The estate was previously inhabited by William's ancestor Edward VIII, who lived in the home after he abdicated the throne to marry Wallis Simpson. More from StyleCaster Kate Middleton's Parents' Futures Revealed Amid Speculation Over What Their Titles Will Be Once She Becomes Queen Charles 'Fuming' Over William & Kate's Plans to Move After His Relationship With Harry Ended Over the Same Reason As for why William and Kate are looking to move, The Daily Mail reported that the Prince and Princess of Wales 'feel they have outgrown Adelaide Cottage' now that their kids are older and 'need something more substantial.' 'This is the perfect new home for them. It has a swimming pool and tennis court, and Charlotte loves playing tennis,' a source said. According to The Daily Mail, a 'move to a more substantial property would mark a new chapter' for William and Kate, especially after spending much of Kate's cancer treatment at Adelaide Cottage in 2024. The Daily Mail also reported that Fort Belvedere is just one of several homes William and Kate are looking into, and that 'no move is imminent.' Previously, there were rumors that William and Kate were interested in moving into the Royal Lodge—the 30-room mansion where Prince Andrew lives with his ex-wife Sarah Feguson—but 'Andrew resisted pressure from King [Charles] to leave.' The Daily Mail also reported that William and Kate considered moving into a wing of Windsor Castle but the area is 'understood to no longer be viable.' Rumors of William and Kate's move also come after reports that Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, who moved to the United States in 2019 and now live in Montecito, California, were relocating back to the United Kingdom as Harry repairs his relationship with his father, King Charles. The rumors came after Grant Harrold, former royal butler to King Charles, told Study Dog that Harry is 'quite keen' for his and Meghan's children—Archie and Lilibet—to experience British schooling. 'It's very likely and completely possible,' he said.'If they have their younger education in America, I'm sure their father will be quite keen to have a bit of a British education,' he continued. 'But then it depends on how the relationship is with the rest of the family when the time comes.' A source for People, however, debunked the rumors. A source confirmed to the magazine that Harry and Meghan are happy living in and raising their family in California and have no plans to leave. That said, he could be coming back to the U.K. more often if his aides' recent meeting with Charles' staff means anything for their future relationship. 'It was a good first step,' an insider told People in July 2025. 'It is always better to be talking.' Best of StyleCaster The 26 Best Romantic Comedies to Watch if You Want to Know What Love Feels Like These 'Bachelor' Secrets & Rules Prove What Happens Behind the Scenes Is So Much Juicier BTS's 7 Members Were Discovered in the Most Unconventional Ways Solve the daily Crossword

Alex Warren's ‘Ordinary' Leads Hot 100 for Ninth Week, ‘KPop Demon Hunters' Slays With New Top 10
Alex Warren's ‘Ordinary' Leads Hot 100 for Ninth Week, ‘KPop Demon Hunters' Slays With New Top 10

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Alex Warren's ‘Ordinary' Leads Hot 100 for Ninth Week, ‘KPop Demon Hunters' Slays With New Top 10

Alex Warren's 'Ordinary' holds at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100, while two adversarial acts from KPop Demon Hunters take their battle to the top 10. More from Billboard Fans Choose Mariah The Scientist & Kali Uchis' 'Is It a Crime' as This Week's Favorite New Music Oasis Fan Dies After Falling During Concert at London's Wembley Stadium Mel B Marries Rory McPhee for Second Time in Moroccan Wedding: 'We Had the Time of Our Lives' 'Ordinary' adds a ninth week atop the Hot 100. The song has spent all its weeks on top consecutively, having become Warren's first leader on the chart. Meanwhile, 'Golden,' by HUNTR/X — the trio of EJAE, Audrey Nuna and REI AMI — holds at its No. 2 Hot 100 high, as 'Your Idol,' by Saja Boys — Andrew Choi, Neckwav, Danny Chung, Kevin Woo and samUIL Lee — reaches the top 10, bounding 12-9. The songs, each act's first top 10, are from the hit Netflix animated film KPop Demon Hunters and its soundtrack, which notches a second week at its No. 2 best on the Billboard 200 albums chart. It rules the Soundtracks chart for a sixth week. Browse the full rundown of this week's top 10 below. The Hot 100 blends all-genre U.S. streaming (official audio and official video), radio airplay and sales data, the lattermost metric reflecting purchases of physical singles and digital tracks from full-service digital music retailers; digital singles sales from direct-to-consumer (D2C) sites are excluded from chart calculations. All charts (dated Aug. 9, 2025) will update on tomorrow, Aug. 5. For all chart news, you can follow @billboard and @billboardcharts on both X, formerly known as Twitter, and Instagram. Luminate, the independent data provider to the Billboard charts, completes a thorough review of all data submissions used in compiling the weekly chart rankings. Luminate reviews and authenticates data. In partnership with Billboard, data deemed suspicious or unverifiable is removed, using established criteria, before final chart calculations are made and published. 'Ordinary' Streams, Airplay & Sales 'Ordinary,' on Atlantic Records, tallied 19.4 million official streams (down 6% week-over-week), 73.3 million radio airplay audience impressions (down 1%) and 6,000 sold (essentially even) in the United States July 25-31. The track keeps at No. 4 on Streaming Songs, following four weeks at the summit; secures a seventh week at No. 1 on Radio Songs; and rises 9-4 Digital Song Sales, after nine weeks on top. 'Ordinary' also makes it a perfect 10 weeks atop the Songs of the Summer chart, having led each week since the survey made its annual seasonal return after Memorial Day. HUNTR/X vs. Saja Boys in Top 10'Golden' by HUNTR/X repeats at its No. 2 Hot 100 high. It simultaneously tops Streaming Songs for a second week, up 13% to 28.9 million streams — as it's the Hot 100's top gainer in streaming for a fifth consecutive week. The song, from the hit Netflix animated movie KPop Demon Hunters, also sports surges of 31% to 4.9 million in radio audience and 19% to 5,000 sold, boosted by a remix by David Guetta, released July 25. Meanwhile, Saja Boys, HUNTR/X's foes in the film, bound 12-9 on the Hot 100 with 'Your Idol.' The song is driven largely by streams, with 19 million (up 1%) in the tracking week. Despite their on-screen differences, HUNTR/X and Saja Boys team up to make KPop Demon Hunters the first movie to spin off two Hot 100 top 10s since another animated hit: In 2022, Disney's Encanto yielded the ensemble smash 'We Don't Talk About Bruno' (No. 1 for five weeks) and 'Surface Pressure' by Jessica Darrow (No. 8 peak), with both written solely by Lin-Manuel Miranda. Rest of Top 10: Wallen's 'What I Want' & More Morgan Wallen's 'What I Want,' featuring Tate McRae, climbs 4-3 on the Hot 100, after it debuted in May as Wallen's fourth No. 1 and McRae's first. It logs an 11th week at No. 1 on the multimetric Hot Country Songs chart. Justin Bieber's 'Daisies' dips 3-4 on the Hot 100, two weeks after it debuted at No. 2. It's the chart's top gainer in airplay for a second week (17 million, up 61%). Wallen's 'Just in Case' keeps at No. 5, on the Hot 100 after reaching No. 2, and Ravyn Lenae's 'Love Me Not' is steady at its No. 6 high. Teddy Swims' 'Lose Control,' which led the Hot 100 for a week in March 2024, and finished as the year's No. 1 song, stays at No. 7 — as it adds a record-extending 102nd week on the chart overall and a record-padding 72nd week in the top 10. Shaboozey's 'A Bar Song (Tipsy)' is stationary at No. 8 on the Hot 100, following its record-tying 19 weeks at No. 1 beginning last July. Capping the Hot 100's top 10, Lady Gaga and Bruno Mars' 'Die With a Smile' remains at No. 10, following five weeks at No. 1 beginning in January. Best of Billboard Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1 Four Decades of 'Madonna': A Look Back at the Queen of Pop's Debut Album on the Charts Chart Rewind: In 1990, Madonna Was in 'Vogue' Atop the Hot 100

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store