Words: Charlotte Philby
Images: Tom Little

Being an artist and a full-time mum is “very difficult”. As Lenka Clayton discovered when she had her first child, three years ago. “Before I had my son I’d travelled a lot, exhibited and been part of residencies all over the place. Suddenly I wasn’t able to move anymore, and found lots of residencies don’t accommodate families.”

That was in 2011. Since when Clayton, a Cornwall-born interdisciplinary artist who trained in documentary film-making, and works across sculpture, textiles, photography, among a multitude of media, decided to use her work to explore her new role as a mother: “The idea was to look at things about parenthood that are usually obstacles to working – the anxiety, exhaustion, the lack of time and resources – and using those subjects to work from rather than as things that get in the way.”

63 Objects Taken from My Son's Mouth / limited edition book / Design: Brett Yasko

The result was a series of projects including the photographic archive ’63 Objects From My Son’s Mouth’ (selected images below), and a compelling collection of three films called ‘The Distance I Can Be From My Son’ (bottom of page), which Clayton describes as “an attempt to objectively measure the furthest distance I can be from my son in a variety of environments. In each film, in three different environments, my son wanders into shot and then away from the camera. I allow him to go far as I can until I feel that panic; it is a physical measure of this emotional distance.”

Such pieces, says Clayton, who has lived in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for the past five years, and is primary carer to her two children – now aged 3 and one and a half – have allowed her “the space to step out and look in from the outside… to have a distance from the everyday ongoing experience”. Part of a larger project called Residency in Motherhood, such work is, she says, “a way to explore this really subjective experience which is usually private; the experience of me as a particular mum with a particular child, and re-present that as an experience which other people can step into and share.”

“Having kids really transformed my practice,” she adds. “Before having children I did very involved, labour-intensive projects. Now I don’t have time for that kind of working but actually it has helped me to observe better. Now I’m making more art than I did before I had kids. I have less time but strangely motherhood allows me to be bit looser, and more playful and bit less precious.”

More in Features

By , 6th November 2023
Features
My new literary suspense THE END OF SUMMER announced in The Bookseller

From book to screen

By , 28th February 2023
Features
Free resources and tips for would be screenwriters, from a complete novice - and some professionals - as I navigate the process of adapting my novels for TV and film

Observer New Review Q&A

By , 22nd March 2022
Features
An interview with Stephanie Merritt about Edith and Kim, the perils of writing about family, and why female spies often get overlooked

Researching Edith and Kim

By , 17th November 2021
Features
From a compendium of stories about life at the Bauhaus to a Modernist memoir by the founder of the iconic Isokon, here are some of the books that inspired my forthcoming novel

Book festivals 2021

By , 19th August 2021
Features
From a celebration of the life of John le Carré at Cheltenham to an exploration of women and crime in Chiswick, please join me at one of the following events, across the country (and the internet!)