A unique university collection of artwork dealing with childbirth has been expanded and relaunched.
Curator Helen Knowles is herself an artist who has drawn on her experiences of giving birth to two children, one by Caesarean section and the second at home. In 2008, she organised an exhibition called Birth Rites that involved five artists collaborating with midwives, obstetricians and birth professionals.
The results were shown at both the Glasgow Science Centre and the Manchester Museum. They were then taken in by the University of Salford and form the basis for , which claims to be the world鈥檚 鈥渇irst and only collection of contemporary artwork dedicated to the subject of childbirth鈥. It is housed at the School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Care in the Mary Seacole Building, originally on the floor devoted to midwifery.聽
The collection relies on donations and now consists of about 70 works in a variety of media, dealing with the whole process from conception through to breastfeeding as well as the themes of infertility and miscarriage.
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Liv Pennington鈥檚 Private View, for example, was created by going to a nightclub and asking women to pee on to a pregnancy test. The results are all displayed in a geometric format along with comments such as 鈥淚鈥檓 scared of being pregnant even though I鈥檓 not having sex鈥, 鈥淚鈥檇 better not be or I鈥檓 Buggered鈥 and 鈥淛o dared me to do this 鈥 the beer was a bonus鈥. There were cases where women were startled to discover that they were pregnant during the project.
Although Ms Knowles stresses that it is 鈥渁n art collection, not a collection of educational tools鈥, she also notes that 鈥渢he midwives see its potential in stimulating discussion鈥, leading to an impact on teaching and even social policy.
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Issues raised by the work, according to the BRC website, include 鈥渢he shift towards medical intervention in birth鈥, 鈥渉ow free women are to give birth in a way they want鈥 and 鈥渨ho controls the process of childbirth and why鈥.
鈥淭here is so much work on this subject and it doesn鈥檛 get the attention it deserves,鈥 argued Ms Knowles, because images of childbirth 鈥渟till feel incredibly taboo鈥.
Hermione Wiltshire鈥檚 digital print, Unmedicated, first time mother (Terese experiencing birth ecstasy) from Ina May Gaskin's archive, captures the moment of 鈥渃rowning鈥 鈥 and had to be moved away from the entrance doorway when it was first shown in the Birth Rites exhibition.
The collection has now moved to a more prominent place within the Mary Seacole Building and is being relaunched this week with additional work by 11 new artists.
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Ana Casas Broda鈥檚 Kinderwunsch consists of a series of photographs and prints documenting her fertility treatment. Bella Milroy鈥檚 Sharing the Gift from Eleanor (Woven Arms) shows the artist鈥檚 mother holding a stillborn child. And Billie Bond鈥檚 A Link With the Past is a stoneware and ceramic sculptural group of a pregnant and a breastfeeding woman in an ancient Egyptian style.
The opening will be marked by talks, performance and a 鈥渢werkshop鈥 by PhD student Fannie Sosa, who that she 鈥渢werk[ed] to remember my roots; my foremothers that danced with their ass since the dawn of humanity and mastered their fertility outside of phallic towers of control like the state and the church. Twerking is intrinsically linked with women in control of their bodies and their wombs.鈥
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Print headline: Twerking session to open childbirth show
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