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Spirituality and Sculpture

Modernist artists, including Epstein, Moody and Manley, took their inspiration, in part, from ancient sculpture to create visual representations of metaphysical subjects. These included the spiritual within humanity, ideas of the self, birth, gender and sexuality and, in the case of Manley, the medium of sculpture was used to represent spiritual life and beliefs in the Caribbean.

Early twentieth-century archaeologists held many assumptions about ancient figurines of women, presuming they were not of individual women but symbolic of a universal idea of 'womanhood' connected to fertility and birth. The historian Stephanie Lynn Budin has argued that 'anonymous females, especially of Near Eastern extraction, have also been repeatedly identified not merely with the concept of fertility but as some universal "Earth Mother Fertility Goddess."' Modernist artists, as seen in Epstein's and Moody's work, did visualise male figures to represent ideas of fertility but the idea of the 'Earth Mother' was a powerful symbol for early twentieth century artists.

Predynastic Figurine: Fertility symbol or simple form?

The small terracotta predynastic figurine was found in a cemetery at Qau, dating to between 3700 and 3100BC BC. The excavation was organised by archaeologists Guy Brunton and Gertrude Caton-Thompson, who recognised the settlements in the area as belonging to an early farming culture now known as Badarian.

Back of Predynastic Figurine

Back of Predynastic Figurine UC9601

It is not clear if this figurine belonged to Badarian culture; neither is it clear what its function is or what the symbol on the back means. It has been perceived as a fertility symbol or female figure of worship though there is limited evidence for this; as Petrie Museum curator Alice Stevenson points out, these female figurines are extremely rare among the grave goods found from this period.

Its significance - spiritual or otherwise - is now immersed with the simple aesthetics of its abstracted form. In 2014 this diminutive figurine was displayed alongside work by Barbara Hepworth, Anish Kapoor and others in the Forme Simples exhibition at the Pompidou-Metz Centre, Paris.

Ronald Moody, Annie. 

Moody's philosophical beliefs exhibit themselves in his work in multifaceted ways. Annie portrays a vision of calm and tranquillity and was perhaps formed with ancient Egyptian sculpture in mind. It is one of the twelve pieces which were sent to the Harmon Foundation for their 1939 exhibition on 'Contemporary Negro Art.'

Ronald Moody, Annie

Ronald Moody, Annie. Harmon Foundation Collection, 1922 - 1967, U.S. National Archives and Records Administration. Reproduced courtesy of the Ronald Moody Foundation. Image sourced from Wikimedia Commons.

Edna Manley, Eve 

During the 1930s, Edna Manley powerfully represented Caribbean experiences and culture as well as political and spiritual life, particularly in her work influenced by the Caribbean spiritual practice of Pocomania. She also explored Greek and biblical symbols of life and, inspired by Caribbean culture, created pieces including Demeter (1925) a representation of the Greek 'Earth Mother' and her 1929 piece Eve pictured here.

Edna Manley, Eve

Edna Manley, Eve, 1929, Museums Sheffield. Reproduced courtesy of the Edna Manley Foundation. Image courtesy of Museums Sheffield.

Jacob Epstein carving Maternity 

Epstein's work explored spirituality, belief, sexuality and humanity in unconstrained ways which were opposed by many conservatives in the art world, yet were influential for other sculptors. Epstein's work presented a range of spiritual traditions; inspired partly by Egyptian sculpture - particularly predynastic figurines and the Amarna period - he represented ancient Egyptian sun worship in Sun Goddess Crouching (1909-1910) and Sun God (1910). He fused many cultural influences in works symbolically representing women, maternity and birth such as Genesis (1931), where he represents the earth's mother, and in Maternity (1910).

Jacob Epstein carving Maternity

Jacob Epstein carving Maternity, Portland stone, 1910. Reproduced courtesy of The Estate of Sir Jacob Epstein. Image courtesy of Courtauld Institute of Art.

Study ideas 

Discuss:

  • What is meant by the term 'earth mother'? Why do you think the idea of a universal mother was (and is?) still popular?

Analyse:

  • Compare three or more representations of the female body from different periods. What similarities and differences do you note in form and concept? Research the wider context - artist, period, media, ideological background etc - for each work and assess again.