Emma Jääskeläinen
Slo Mo Mother
16 Apr - 02 Jul 2023
Slo Mo Mother was the first solo exhibition of Finnish artist Emma Jääskeläinen (1988) in the Netherlands. She presented recent sculptures, specifically adapted and expanded with new elements for Vleeshal. The title of the exhibition refers to the physical act of slowing down that Jääskeläinen experiences in both motherhood and her work as an artist, two roles of labor that she depicts and connects with humoristic light-heartedness.
Physicality, slowness, and repetition play an important role in Jääskeläinen's work. This is not only evident in her "Gustonian" bulky body forms, but also in her choice of marble as the primary material for her sculptures. The labor intensive and repetitive manual work required to process the heavy blocks of stone is a way for Jääskeläinen to engage in a dialogue and allow the material itself to determine the form. She describes the intensive relationship she has with the stone as family-like, experiencing similar feelings of empathy, care, and attention.
Jääskeläinen addresses fundamental questions about motherhood and care, but she always does so with funny, clumsy, and soft forms. The stories, anecdotes, and motifs underlying the sculptures are influenced by the life of the artist as part of a family. From domestic tasks to her father smoking a cigarette, from her brother's blisters caused by playing the guitar to a lullaby she sings to her children. Rather than telling a personal story her works depict universal feelings regarding life’s questions.
Next to stone carving, Jääskeläinen works with metal casting and wool felting techniques. Sometimes she adds an everyday object as a concrete indication of a story or event, but the meaning of her work usually remains suggestive and open to multiple interpretations. Text is an essential part of Jääskeläinen’s practice. While working, she creates a network of words referring to the materials and associations present in the object; forming rhymes and catchy phrases that reveal her performative background.
An interesting aspect of Jääskeläinen's practice is that she continues to adapt her sculptures. In the Vleeshal, she transformed the existing sculptures
At Her Fingertips and Repose by adding new details and further working the marble stone. At Her Fingertips is about the connection between mother and child, and the process of detachment. The sculpture consists of five stones lying apart from each other. It forms one gigantic hand in which a subtle chain connects the fingers to the palm of the hand. By adding more stones and another chain with links made of hearts, eternity signs and zeros, she reflects on her experience of becoming a mother. According to Jääskeläinen the fingers are like child-sized “piglets”, aggressively chained to the palm of the hand. The hand with a cigarette clamped between the fingers in Repose refers to a rare moment of rest in the life of a mother. Hands are a recurring motif in Jääskeläinen’s work, being a portrait of labor.
For the back of the space Jääskeläinen has designed a fireplace that has been built by the technical team of Vleeshal. The warm heart of the home, a place to gather around.
Curator: Roos Gortzak
Physicality, slowness, and repetition play an important role in Jääskeläinen's work. This is not only evident in her "Gustonian" bulky body forms, but also in her choice of marble as the primary material for her sculptures. The labor intensive and repetitive manual work required to process the heavy blocks of stone is a way for Jääskeläinen to engage in a dialogue and allow the material itself to determine the form. She describes the intensive relationship she has with the stone as family-like, experiencing similar feelings of empathy, care, and attention.
Jääskeläinen addresses fundamental questions about motherhood and care, but she always does so with funny, clumsy, and soft forms. The stories, anecdotes, and motifs underlying the sculptures are influenced by the life of the artist as part of a family. From domestic tasks to her father smoking a cigarette, from her brother's blisters caused by playing the guitar to a lullaby she sings to her children. Rather than telling a personal story her works depict universal feelings regarding life’s questions.
Next to stone carving, Jääskeläinen works with metal casting and wool felting techniques. Sometimes she adds an everyday object as a concrete indication of a story or event, but the meaning of her work usually remains suggestive and open to multiple interpretations. Text is an essential part of Jääskeläinen’s practice. While working, she creates a network of words referring to the materials and associations present in the object; forming rhymes and catchy phrases that reveal her performative background.
An interesting aspect of Jääskeläinen's practice is that she continues to adapt her sculptures. In the Vleeshal, she transformed the existing sculptures
At Her Fingertips and Repose by adding new details and further working the marble stone. At Her Fingertips is about the connection between mother and child, and the process of detachment. The sculpture consists of five stones lying apart from each other. It forms one gigantic hand in which a subtle chain connects the fingers to the palm of the hand. By adding more stones and another chain with links made of hearts, eternity signs and zeros, she reflects on her experience of becoming a mother. According to Jääskeläinen the fingers are like child-sized “piglets”, aggressively chained to the palm of the hand. The hand with a cigarette clamped between the fingers in Repose refers to a rare moment of rest in the life of a mother. Hands are a recurring motif in Jääskeläinen’s work, being a portrait of labor.
For the back of the space Jääskeläinen has designed a fireplace that has been built by the technical team of Vleeshal. The warm heart of the home, a place to gather around.
Curator: Roos Gortzak