A Mother’s Embrace: Capturing Pure and Unconditional Love

Over generations, five classical paintings demonstrate the timeless subject of maternal love.
A Mother’s Embrace: Capturing Pure and Unconditional Love
A detail of "A Tender Embrace," 1887, by Emile Munier. For centuries, painters have returned to the theme of maternal affection again and again. Public Domain
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A mother gazing at a sleeping child. A daughter pulled close in an embrace. These are not complicated images; and yet, for centuries, painters have returned to them again and again. Perhaps that is because maternal love is not a single feeling but many: tenderness and protectiveness, wonder and weariness, universal and yet intensely private.

The subject has a way of making itself available to every painter personally, regardless of era or style. Maternal love is not a theme that requires research or imagination—it is simply there, in the room, in the studio, in the next moment of an ordinary day. For an artist already trained to look closely at the world, it may be the most compelling thing they have ever had directly in front of them.

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Sarah Isak-Goode
Sarah Isak-Goode
Author
Sarah Isak-Goode is a writer and art historian rooted in the Pacific Northwest. Her name—pronounced EYE-zik-good and meaning "good laugh"—hints at the warmth she brings to everything she does. Equal parts scholar and storyteller, Sarah brings the past to life through a distinctly human lens, exploring what connects us across the centuries. Away from her desk, she feeds her curiosity through traveling, painting, reading, and hiking with her dog, Thor.