A New Show Explores How Artists From Hans Holbein to Jenny Saville Have Depicted Pregnancy Over 500 Years—See Highlights Here
“Portraying Pregnancy: From Holbein to Social
Media” at the Foundling Museum, London
Through April 26, 2020
What the Museum Says: “Until the 20th
century, many women spent most of their adult years pregnant.
Despite this, pregnancies are seldom apparent in surviving
portraits. This exhibition brings together images of women—mainly
British—who were depicted at a time when they were pregnant
(whether visibly so or not). Through paintings, prints,
photographs, objects, and clothing from the 15th century to the
present day, discover the different ways in which pregnancy was, or
was not, represented; how shifting social attitudes have impacted
depictions of pregnant women; how the possibility of death in
childbirth brought additional tension to such representations; and
how more recent images, which often reflect increased female agency
and empowerment, still remain highly charged.”
Why It’s Worth a Look: The Foundling
Museum in London has a particularly interesting history. The site
was originally created as the Foundling Hospital, thanks to a royal
charter in 1739, it was established by Thomas Coram as a place for
children at varying stages of life, all vulnerable, and at risk of
abandonment or even death. Though the hospital closed in 1954 and
the museum didn’t open as such until 50 years later, the weighty
history of the place looms large.

The Foundling Museum in London. Courtesy
of Flickr Creative Commons.
Even in its infancy (no pun intended), the institution was a
charity with an emphasis on creativity—William Hogarth and composer
George Frideric Handel were devoted patrons—and it was the site of
the first public art gallery, thanks to generous donations from
artists. So it is especially poignant that this storied place—a
museum founded to take care of those children who were the result
of an unwanted pregnancy, the death of a parent, or a similarly
untenable situation for a child—has launched the first exhibition
to take on the theme of how pregnancy has been portrayed over the
course of the past 500 years.
Curator Karen Hearn spent about 20 years researching depictions
of pregnancy before launching this exhibition, which includes works
dating from the early 16th century through 2017, and the show
traces how the shifting of social and cultural values has impacted
the various ways women are portrayed during pregnancy.
What It Looks Like:

Ghislaine Howard, Pregnant Self
Portrait (1984). © Ghislaine Howard.

G.H. Harlow, Sarah Siddons as Lady
Macbeth (1814). © The Garrick Club.

Marcus Gheeraerts II, Portrait of a
Woman in Red (1620). © Tate.

Princess Charlotte’s Russian-style
dress. Royal Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
2019.

James Gillray, …and wouldst thou
turn the vile reproach on me? (1807). Private collection.

Jenny Saville, Electra
(2012–2019) © Jenny Saville. Photo: Prudence Cuming Associates.
Courtesy of the artist and Gagosian.

William Hogarth, The March of the
Guards to Finchley (1750). © The Foundling Museum.

Textile panel with embracing figures. ©
Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford.

Self-portrait of Mary Beale with her
husband Charles and son Bartholomew, oil on canvas, painted c.1660
in London.

Chantal Joffe, Self-Portrait Pregnant
II (2004). ©Chantal Joffe, courtesy of the artist and Victoria
Miro.

Hans Holbein II, Cecily Heron Royal
Collection Trust © Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II 2019.
The post A New Show Explores How Artists From Hans Holbein
to Jenny Saville Have Depicted Pregnancy Over 500 Years—See
Highlights Here appeared first on artnet News.
Read more https://news.artnet.com/exhibitions/pregnancy-in-art-at-the-foundling-museum-1770660



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