Your guide to London's culture and transport news and events taking place across the city.

Your guide to London's culture and transport news and events taking place across the city.

Exhibition: Portraying Pregnancy: From Holbein to Social Media

Location

Foundling Museum,

40 Brunswick Square, London,
WC1N 1AZ

Dates

This exhibition CLOSED on Sun, 23rd Aug 2020

This exhibition has finished.

Cost: £9.50

Description

Portraying Pregnancy is a major exhibition exploring representations of the pregnant female body through portraits, over 500 years.

The accompanying book Portraying Pregnancy: From Holbein to Social Media by Karen Hearn, is currently available from publishers Paul Holberton here. The publishers have set up a special offer for Museum friends and visitors. For the discounted price of £20 (including UK postage) please add the promo code FOUNDLING before checking out.

Until the twentieth 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 fifteenth century to the present day, you can discover the different ways in which pregnancy was, or was not, represented; how shifting social attitudes have impacted on 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.

Portraying Pregnancy, was curated by Karen Hearn and brings together, for the first time, rare examples of these portraits providing an exceptional opportunity to situate contemporary issues of women’s identity, emotion, empowerment and autonomy in a 500-year context.

The exhibition includes Holbein’s beautiful portrait of Thomas More’s daughter, Cicely Heron, which was sketched from life; the maternity dress that Princess Charlotte wore for her portrait painted by George Dawe in 1817, the year that she died in childbirth, both on loan by Her Majesty The Queen from the Royal Collection; and the Foundling Museum’s celebrated painting by William Hogarth, The March of the Guards to Finchley, 1750, which features a heavily pregnant woman at its centre. Also on display Alison Lapper (8 Months), 2000, by Marc Quinn and Girl with Roses, 1947-8 and Lucian Freud’s portrait of his first wife Kitty. A previously unseen work by Jenny Saville, Electra, 2012-2019, was on display until the exhibition had to close on 17 March 2020.


Contact and Booking Details

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Disclaimer

The information and prices in this listing are presumed to be correct at the time of publishing, but please always check with the venue before making a special trip.

All images are supplied by the exhibition organiser.

This exhibition has finished.

This event runs over several days/weeks. Dates include:

Location

Foundling Museum,

40 Brunswick Square, London,
WC1N 1AZ

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