Installation view of 《Mothering Fluid》 © Amado Art Space

The exhibition 《Mothering Fluid》 focuses on what is left out from the sense of becoming a mother. “Mothering” here is a practice that involves enduring the experience of deferred emotions, a fluid state that is repeatedly recalibrated in a cycle of failures and repetition.

The exhibition attempts to separate the fluidity of mothering from the narrative of motherhood. Becoming a mother is not a question of achievement—of conforming to the definition of motherhood that society forces on us. It is an event where the body, time, and emotion are constantly being rearranged. Failure, deferral, and repetition do not represent defects in mothering, but the conditions that shape it.

The exhibition considers the things omitted in the name of motherhood: the unfamiliarity of one’s own body, the amplification of emotions, the failures and deferrals of care. It imbues visual possibilities into this sense of being a mother, invisible and non-linguistic aspects that end up erased and unrevealed.

“Becoming a mother” thus emerges not in terms of a fixed role but as a way of coping with life, a moral, sensory state that takes place in relation to others as we endure the emotions and the repetitions. 

Installation view of 《Mothering Fluid》 © Amado Art Space

Unfolding in a space divided between two floors, the exhibition adopts the fluid perceptions of mothering as sensory layers. To explore the sense of motherhood, it presents work from the perspectives of six artists who have undergone the physical experiences of pregnancy, childbirth, and child-rearing.

Installation view of 《Mothering Fluid》 © Amado Art Space

The designs for the ground and basement levels respectively follow the flows of perceptions from the body and the relationships that arise from the practice of mothering.

The exhibition begins with a landscape that is biological and physical. It presents the mother’s body as something that harbors the changes as childbirth approaches, the movements of growth within the body, the strange perceptions, the repeated everyday experience of childcare, and the traces that arise out of that. 

The basement level marks a slow descent from the performances of the body to the stratum of relationships. The space is organized as a realm of relationships between connections with others that operates alongside the balance of caregiving and unpredictable waves of emotion.

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