Public Artwork

The Birthing Project

Description

The Birthing Project was created through WITH ART which matches artists with community groups to explore issues through the collaborative artmaking process, creating projects that directly address community concerns while leaving a permanent visual and cultural legacy in Winnipeg.
 
Artist Judy Jennings worked with the stories of birthing women, women in labour and midwives for several months. She met with new and expectant mothers and their babies throughout the project, conducting workshops where the women contributed sketches, stories and photographs. The women were asked to reflect on symbols about pregnancy and delivery that they believed would help other women gather strength during their labouring. Judy translated their sketches into glass pieces that were eventually arranged in an installation. To create the individual discs, paper drawings of the images were first made. The glass discs were then created from the sketches by layering glass pieces and powdered glass and firing in the kiln to fuse the layers together. Ms. Jennings made the glass beads using a lamp working torch that runs on a mixture of oxygen and propane for a flame hot enough to melt glass rods around a steel mandrill.
 
The project was titled The Birthing Project to honour the pioneering work of Judy Chicago, who created the Birth Project in 1985. This new piece acknowledges what Ms. Chicago has done in recognizing the importance of mothers and the help derived from the research she has published.
 
“We envisioned a project that would represent the power and joy of the work of giving birth-- and to reclaim it as a social and cultural event, not just a medical one.  Judy has captured exquisitely the stories and images of women, midwives, nurses and physicians who shared their birth stories with us.” Madeline Boscoe, Women’s Health Clinic

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Artist Biography

Judy is a full time glass artist working from her home studio in Winnipeg. Most of her stained glass projects are commissioned for installation in homes and churches. Her largest project was St. Lukes Episcopal Church in Rochester Minnesota where she created all of the stained glass for the sanctuary and lobby. Between stained glass projects, Judy plays with compatible glass in her kiln, fusing and slumping it into pieces for gallery sales.

She was invited to do a solo show of her work at the North Dakota Museum of Art where one of her major pieces was purchased by the Museum for their collection. Her glass butterflies of all sizes flew in the Conservatory at Assiniboine park in 2006 thanks to a crafts grant from the Manitoba Arts Council. Her next project will be a large stained glass window for the new addition of Charleswood United Church where she has previously designed and fabricated all the sanctuary windows. "I began working with glass 25 years ago and my passion for the medium in all its forms, from the light changing qualities of stained glass to the volatile liquidity of hot glass, just grows and grows. Glass is endlessly fascinating and it keeps challenging me to new projects."

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