Milan
show depicts drama of modern motherhood
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[August 27, 2015]
By Isla Binnie
MILAN (Reuters) - A 1896
film of a woman plucking babies from a cabbage patch
marks a whimsical start to a Milan exhibition that
examines artistic representations of motherhood, but the
mood turns more sinister as the show moves into the 20th
century.
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"The Great Mother" recounts a turbulent period in the history
of women through more than 400 paintings, photographs, drawings,
sculptures, short films, and artefacts, including a flyer
advertising the first abortion clinic.
Also featured are a model of a full-body torture machine based
on a description written by Franz Kafka in 1914, and Jeff
Koons's voluptuous red sculpture "Balloon Venus".
In "Amazing Grace" by Jamaican artist Nari Ward, 280 empty prams
found on the street are arranged around a pathway of flattened
fire hoses in a gloomy room, accompanied by a gospel rendition
of the eponymous hymn.
Curator Massimiliano Gioni, whose partner gave birth on
Saturday, joked at a news conference that the show might have
been "sweeter" if his son had arrived before the project was
finished.
The exhibition, which opened on Wednesday at Milan's Palazzo
Reale, traces a period in which "darker and more irrational and
instinctive facets" began to emerge, the venue's director
Domenico Piraina said.
A photograph of Sigmund Freud with his mother Amalia points to
the role the father of psychoanalysis plays, with several of the
artists presented offering critical interpretations of his
theories about the human psyche.
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A 1974 photograph of U.S. artist Lynda Benglis posing naked with a
model of a phallus is described in the catalogue as a "candid taunt
to Freudian theory" that "assigns women a fixed psychological
identity based on anatomical distinction".
The fight for women's suffrage is commemorated with a brooch calling
for "Votes for Our Mothers" and a newspaper photograph of a
suffragette prisoner on hunger strike being force-fed.
"This exhibition is about the regenerative power of the mother, but
also about the power denied women," said Beatrice Trussardi,
president of the Nicola Trussardi Foundation, a non-profit cultural
organization that co-produced the show.
The exhibition runs to Nov. 15 and is one of thousands of events
coinciding with the 2015 Expo World Fair.
(Reporting by Isla Binnie; Editing by Michael Roddy and John
Stonestreet)
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