Jenny Saville isn't the kind of artist to be coy about the complexities of balancing motherhood and an art career. It's all over her paintings - particularly the work in her 2011 exhibition "Continuum," at Gagosian Gallery, which was made during and after her two pregnancies. The images here are self-portraits from the show depicting Saville struggling to hold onto her vigorously squirming kiddos. Can you relate? The Wall Street Journal gives an interesting glimpse into the series HERE.
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Jenny Saville's "Continuum"
Jenny Saville isn't the kind of artist to be coy about the complexities of balancing motherhood and an art career. It's all over her paintings - particularly the work in her 2011 exhibition "Continuum," at Gagosian Gallery, which was made during and after her two pregnancies. The images here are self-portraits from the show depicting Saville struggling to hold onto her vigorously squirming kiddos. Can you relate? The Wall Street Journal gives an interesting glimpse into the series HERE.
Friday, October 26, 2012
FoAM's Family-in-Residence Program
the Simpson family collaborating at FoAM Brussels in 2011 |
From the FoAM website:
"In 2010 FoAM expanded its residency programme to include people of all ages. The first experiment was having a “Family in Residence” (FIR), welcoming Alex Davies, Alexandra Crosby and their young son Luka Davies for a three-month residency at FoAM in Brussels. The experience was extremely positive and we concluded that it is an experiment worth continuing. FoAM’s burgeoning intergenerational residency programme, combined with Alex and Ali’s experiment in parenting, has produced some interesting results."
Alex elaborates on the context for such a program here:
"While the number of these programs is growing, the model of how they function remains notably unchanged. Whether based on social engagement or productive seclusion, they are usually still designed as opportunities for individual artists, rather than integrating existing social relationships into the art making process.
There are a number of reasons for this stagnation, but mostly, artist in residency programs are built on the myths surrounding the individual and secluded (usually male) genius artist. Even residencies based on social engagement are usually based on one artist engaging with a community. In fact, artists in residence depart and return to their families and communities as fathers, husbands, girlfriends, sisters, cultural activists, educators, and social advocates. Some artists in residence can be found isolated in studios making ‘art for art’s sake’, but most artists' work also includes important activities that get slipped in spontaneously between formal requirements of programs. These activities nourish much more than individual careers."
In 2011 the Simpson family (Mark, Lea, Scarlet and Delilah) took on the challenge of a two-week collaborative family residency through foAM, soon to be followed by a week-long microresidency by Lies Declerck and her two-year-old son Adriaan this August. Similar opportunities seem to be slowly but steadily on the rise. We'd love to see a program that offers a residency experience paired with childcare options (partnership with a nearby daycare center?), but in the meantime FoAM's family-in-residence program is a simple but important addition to the opportunities available for artists with children.
Hey Residency Programs: Support Artists with Kids!
The excellent Sustainable Arts Foundation has just announced a new initiative: The Sustainable Arts Foundation Residency Grant Program. This is a two-year pilot program designed to encourage artist and writer residency programs to make their residencies accessible to artists and writers with children.
in the past, the SAF's primary focus has been an award program for individual artists and writers, offering small unrestricted cash awards to artists and writers with at least one dependent child under the age of 18. These individual grants will continue to be offered as well.
The SAF stated in a recent press release, "We expect that the funding awarded through these new residency grants will not only support the organizations that receive them, but that the ideas they generate can be shared and their effects multiplied...We hope that individuals will benefit from them down the road as artist and writer residencies improve their programs to become more available to parents."
The Vermont Studio Center is already using SAF funding to offer a $1,000 - $2,000 fellowship so that parents-in-residence can afford to cover costs related to taking time away from the family (childcare, lost income, travel, etc). Nice start, but what we'd like to see is an opportunity to live with/near family while still having productive studio time. A workstudy childcare program, perhaps? Or a family-friendly living space that allows for spouse and/or grandparents to come and help out during the day? There's plenty of room for improvement here.
For more details on this program, please visit The Sustainable Arts Foundation Website.
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