Sara Khan, Laura Rosengren, Katherine Duclos: Mother Tongue
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Cityscape Community Art Space 355 Lonsdale Ave, North Vancouver, British Columbia V7M 2G3

Katherine Duclos, "Mother Tongue," 2021
Sara Khan, Laura Rosengren, Katherine Duclos: Mother Tongue
Online Artist Talk: Monday, March 8, 7:30 pm
What is motherhood? What does it mean to be a mother? These questions are explored in Mother Tongue, the upcoming exhibition at North Van Arts.
"Our mother tongue is the first language we learn, the sounds we hear and know to repeat and attach meaning. Perhaps our first tongue is our mother's heartbeat, the sound of being surrounded and protected, two bodies, synced and inseparable. This unification is where motherhood begins.
This connection has been the basis for when we speak about motherhood. It is expected for mothers to express love, tenderness, willingness, fulfilment, and make every effort to maintain this bond and for mothers to replace themselves with their children and sacrifice themselves for their child," says the artists involved.
Artists Sara Khan, Laura Rosengren, and Katherine Duclos address the complex range of emotions and practices inherent in the life-changing transformation motherhood brings.
Sara Khan's work speaks to the ambivalence that the experience of motherhood brings with it, re-examining the process through which women are physically and emotionally disfigured during their transformation into mothers. To Khan, motherhood is a series of extremes, a balance between growth and withering away; Mother as a fertile garden, mother as a body, emotions unravelling, and coming together again. Her artwork, with its delicate lines and decorative elements, balance this turbulence.
Laura Rosengren's work reflects on motherhood, labour and domesticity. The images create stories of domestic rituals that are both familiar and strange. The paintings, both specific and vague, highlight the instability of memory carried in our bodies, objects and photographs. Introducing materials like wool and wax, and processes like scrubbing and stitching the work also amplifies the nature of mother work with its material disruptions and accommodations.
Katherine Duclos' work examines the weight of sustaining life with her body and explores this subject using collected breastfeeding and pumping paraphernalia donated by other mothers. These objects are strange and unrecognizable to those unfamiliar with baby feeding. Still, to mothers who know, the objects become symbols that speak to 'the machine' of the female body and the supply and demand process of pumping, feeding, and devoting your body to another. Duclos uses cement to signify this burden's weight and paints with donated expired breastmilk that mothers have kept in their freezers long after their babies stopped feeding.
This exhibition draws together multiple mothers' narratives by creating a visual language of their experiences, challenging the idealized preconceived notions of motherhood.
We invite viewers to experience the joyful, chaotic, loud, anxious, incredible, and surreal elements of being a Mother.