Women in Art 278 Magazine January 2014 | Page 8

co v e r p ag e cont e st GLOBAL FAMILY w inn e r Jennifer Mourin Jennifer Mourin is a self taught Malaysian artist of Eurasian decent, living and working in Penang. She uses mostly acrylics and oil-inks, but loves the fluidity of gouache. Benevolently haunted by memories of her mother’s Thai village in Kelantan (North east Malaysia), she turned her love of sarongs the women wore, and the strength of the women there, into totems for her artistic identity. One consistenly recurring theme in her art is breastfeeding, as Jennifer is incredulous at how such a loving, nurturing act is often considered a controversial act in society, with women regularly maligned for doing so. each breastfeeding mother reduces problems of pollution and waste disposal. Breastfeeding is not resource intensive: there is no need to use up land, water, metals, plastics, and fuels, all of which cost money and deplete the environment. Beastfeeding helps to protect our environment. “So I reclaim this, revelling in the power of mothers supporting mothers, women supporting women. A woman has a right to choose whether she wants to breastfeed her child. When she does choose, it is only right that she is supported to breastfeed and nurtures her child whether at home, in the workplace, or in other places she exists as a part of the society that she lives in. And this support should come from husband, partner, immediate and extended family, her community, and her socio-political leadership. And I am especially fascinated by how women have supported one another for generations and inter-generationally in many communities: from sharing of knowledge, imparting of skills and experience, to a comforting word, smile or hand on the shoulder indicati