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Designing Women III: MOTHER

May 3 - 29, 2021
151 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10013

Presented by Egg Collective
Co-Curated by Crystal Ellis, Hillary Petrie, Stephanie Beamer and Tealia Ellis Ritter
Text by Tealia Ellis Ritter

I’m in the darkroom and there’s a picture in my mind, as well as on the easel in front of me. The negative in my enlarger depicts my two children; the image I see in my mind’s eye is of the artist Ruth Asawa, seated on the ground amongst her hanging wire sculptures. Woven through the frame of the photo, and twisted around the hanging wire works, are her four children. Asawa appears in the back of the frame, wearing a hat, her head facing down... working. The children that surround her crouch and sit, unspooling the wire. In the foreground a naked baby, all rolls and flesh, sits sucking on a bottle. The square black and white image created by Imogen Cunningham, a mother of three, in 1957 titled “Ruth Asawa and her children,” has come to occupy a special corner of my mind. The corner that has weeded out thousands of images, viewed over a number of years as a photographer, logging only the few that have had lasting meaning. The image occupies this place because it simply and beautifully relays a truth I know. The truth of an artist and mother, children and art living together, influencing one another, interrupting one another, children as assistant, children as source of strength and source of exhaustion. It exemplifies the focus and determination necessary to create art and life.

I am in my mind with this image when I read an article in the New York Times in July of 2018 titled “ Curator Says MoMA PS1 Wanted Her, Until She Had a Baby.” In the article, Nikki Columbus, a Harvard graduate, curator and former editor of Artforum and Parkett, describes her experience with MoMA PS1 during the process of being hired as a curator at the museum. A process that was, according to Columbus, abruptly ended once she delivered her son. In 2019 MoMA PS1 settled the claim Columbus filed under the NYC Gender, Pregnancy and Caregiver Discrimination Act for an undisclosed amount, agreeing to rewrite their written policies designed to protect women as part of the settlement.

The image and the article compel me to research maternity discrimination and lead me to a Harvard study and the concept of the “Motherhood Penalty,” which describes the unconscious bias that institutions and society at large hold that women with children are less committed to their jobs, leading to lower wages, less opportunity for promotion and firings due to pregnancy. Men with children, however, are largely conceptualized as more responsible and committed to their employment because they are viewed as breadwinners. My research does not shock me. I don’t think it shocks many women. What does shock me is the visual disconnect between the messages seen on television, in print and on social media, celebrating the family and “baby bumps”, paired with the reality that the US is the only industrialized nation with no federal paid family leave.

I conclude that I am ignorant and decide to seek out information on women in the arts, who were or are also mothers.

The result of this research is a flood of beauty and depth of thought, of perseverance and well earned admiration. The exhibition, Designing Women III: MOTHER, brings together the work of twenty eight historical and contemporary artists and designers, all mothers, who have made or are in the process of making contributions to the art and design landscape. The exhibition is by no means comprehensive; it is but a sliver of the brilliance that exists.

To stand amongst the historical pieces included in Designing Women III: MOTHER offers a compelling look at the work and careers of the historical artists and designers, such as Louise Bourgeois, Eva Zeisel and Imogen Cunningham, noting the struggles that appeared along their paths of motherhood/creator and their eventual critical success. Living legends like Faith Ringgold, Maria Pergay and Loretta Pettway Bennett all of whom produced works, both political and formal, bridging the Civil Rights Movement and the Women’s Liberation Movement, serve as present day luminaries. To look at the works of many of the contemporary artists and designers exhibited, is to view the output of those that are in the struggle presently, navigating the roles of mother and artist/designer during a global pandemic. Their paths are still unfolding. They are the lives in process, the bodies of work still undetermined. Each a link in the chain of trailblazers.

Wave Desk, 1968 by Maria Pergay Beehive Lamp, 1960 by Lucia Derespinis

Wave Desk, 1968 by Maria Pergay
Beehive Lamp, 1960 by Lucia Derespinis

 
Dear Selma, Every Time I See A Dime, I Think Of You, 2010 by Faith Ringgold

Dear Selma, Every Time I See A Dime, I Think Of You, 2010 by Faith Ringgold

 

“Dear Selma, Every time I see a dime I think of you. In 1944 when President Franklin Delano Roosevelt posed for your portrait plaque of him, little did you know this masterful relief profile would show up without attribution, on the dime in 1945 — for all the world to see. — Faith Ringgold 11/13/10”

 
 
 
 
 
Armor Floor Lamp, 2021 by Natasha and Helena Sultan / Konekt Jumbo Coffee Table c. 1970 by Gae Aulenti

Armor Floor Lamp, 2021 by Natasha and Helena Sultan / Konekt
Jumbo Coffee Table c. 1970 by Gae Aulenti

Protective Gestures, 2020 by Tealia Ellis Ritter

Protective Gestures, 2020 by Tealia Ellis Ritter

Two Wangs, 2017 and Moms, 2018 by Elizabeth Atterbury

Two Wangs, 2017 and Moms, 2018 by Elizabeth Atterbury

 
 
 
Body Index, 2018 by Carmen Winant

Body Index, 2018 by Carmen Winant

 
Jug ca. 1929 by Eva Zeisel

Jug ca. 1929 by Eva Zeisel

 
 
Tank, 2004 by Loretta Pettway Bennett

Tank, 2004 by Loretta Pettway Bennett

“I quilt with music. If there’s a good song on, I stop and dance because that runs in the family.”

— Loretta Pettway Bennett

Salute, 2017 and Kick, 2017 by Hannah Whitaker Drape Cabinet A and B, 2005 by Maria Pergay

Salute, 2017 and Kick, 2017 by Hannah Whitaker
Drape Cabinet A and B
, 2005 by Maria Pergay

Mother_Room-2_Pergay-Detail_003.jpg
 
Detail of Beads I, 2018 by Elizabeth Atterbury

Detail of Beads I, 2018 by Elizabeth Atterbury

 
 
Metaphora Coffee Table ca. 1970 by Lella Vignelli / Vignelli Associates Lure Radiata, 2021 by Jean Pelle / PELLE

Metaphora Coffee Table ca. 1970 by Lella Vignelli / Vignelli Associates
Lure Radiata, 2021 by Jean Pelle / PELLE

 

 

“Geometry is not a fad. Geometry is an eternal value.”

— Lella Vignelli


 
Hair, 2000 by Louise Bourgeois © The Easton Foundation/VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY Courtesy of Harlan & WeaverPlume Box , La Mer Box and Puzzle Box by Line Vautrin

Hair, 2000 by Louise Bourgeois
© The Easton Foundation/VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
Courtesy of Harlan & Weaver

Plume Box , La Mer Box and Puzzle Box by Line Vautrin

 
 
Detail of Plume Box and La Mer Box by Line Vautrin

Detail of Plume Box and La Mer Box by Line Vautrin

 
 
 

“I have three frames of reference … my mother and father … my own experience … and the frame of reference of my children. The three are stuck together.”

— Louise Bourgeois

 
 
 
Duet, 2021 site-specific installation by Rachel Cope of Calico Wallpaper and her 6 year old daughter Willow Cope Hornbake Straight Sofa, 2021 by Egg Collective

Duet, 2021 site-specific installation by Rachel Cope of Calico Wallpaper and her 6 year old daughter Willow Cope
Hornbake Straight Sofa, 2021 by Egg Collective

 
Untitled, 1999 and Untitled, 2002 by Tahereh Fallahzadeh

Untitled, 1999 and Untitled, 2002 by Tahereh Fallahzadeh

DV1 Divider by Kai Avent-deLeon Charm Table by Kelly Behun

DV1 Divider by Kai Avent-deLeon
Charm Table by Kelly Behun

 
 
Glacial Lily (False Hellebore), 1926 by Imogen Cunningham Pink Letter, 2015 by Golnar Adili

Glacial Lily (False Hellebore), 1926 by Imogen Cunningham
Pink Letter, 2015 by Golnar Adili

 
 

''We made our century sing.''

— Charlotte Perriand

Flow Plans, 2012 by Loretta Pettway Bennett Dining table (Edition Steph Simon) c. 1960, Oak and Rush Chair c. 1950 and Low Stool, c.1950 by Charlotte Perriand

Flow Plans, 2012 by Loretta Pettway Bennett
Dining table (Edition Steph Simon) c. 1960, Oak and Rush Chair c. 1950 and Low Stool, c.1950 by Charlotte Perriand

 

 
 
Landry Wall-Mount Bookcase, 2021 by Egg Collective

Landry Wall-Mount Bookcase, 2021 by Egg Collective

 
Bow Chair, 2021 by Katrina Vonnegut / Vonnegut Kraft Yucca, 2016 by Luna Paiva

Bow Chair, 2021 by Katrina Vonnegut / Vonnegut Kraft
Yucca, 2016 by Luna Paiva

 

Universe II: Shadows on the Moon, 2015 by Renate Müller TBT, 2020 by Carolyn Salas

Universe II: Shadows on the Moon, 2015 by Renate Müller
TBT, 2020 by Carolyn Salas

 

“Throughout my life, my kids were in my focus and my best users and critics. Today, of course, my four grandchildren serve this role very well.”

— Renate Müller

Desinging Women III: MOTHER graphics by Shawna X

Desinging Women III: MOTHER graphics by Shawna X

 

 
 

“Translating complex emotions is one of my favorite things to tackle. ‘What is love?’ for example. That may seem incredibly easy, but how do you draw ‘love’?”

— Shawna X