Pregnant Belly Artists Paint A Picture Of Motherhood (PHOTOS)

PHOTOS: Pregnant Belly Artists Paint A Picture Of Motherhood
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Both art and giving birth deal with the act of creation, so maybe it's not a surprise that some pregnant ladies -- including Mariah Carey -- want to celebrate their nine months with child in an artistic manner.

And artists like Houston-based body painter Vonetta Berry find a round belly the perfect surface for certain types of artistic creations.

"The first belly I painted was my own," she told HuffPost Weird News. "My first instinct is that, since it's round, I should do something round. But I wanted to play with shades and make a flat surface design look by using shades."

Berry gets as much as $700 for her belly-busting works of art, each of which takes between three and five hours to create, depending on how elaborate a design is used.

"I get a lot of requests for flowers," she said. "Sometimes, a mother wants me to paint what they think the baby might look like. One woman showed me a picture of a gritty ultrasound photo and wanted me to reproduce it in color."

However, her favorite belly painting was from a woman who wanted her to paint a kitchen appliance on her tummy.

"The woman wanted an oven with a little bun inside," she laughed.

PHOTOS:

Pregnant Belly Art
Pregnant Belly Art(01 of10)
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Pregnancy only lasts nine months so some moms wish to immortalize it by turning their bulging bellies into art. (credit:Photo by Yoshi Tanaka)
Pregnant Belly Art(02 of10)
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Houston-based body painter Vonetta Berry gets as much as $700 per belly painting and one of her favorites came from a woman who wanted a picture of what her child might look like trying to get out of the tummy. (credit:Vonetta Berry)
Pregnant Belly Art(03 of10)
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Vancouver-based body painter Allyson Grant says that painting a pregnant belly is an intimate experience for both the mother and the artist. Her first belly painting was on a woman about 7.5 months pregnant and during the 2 hours she worked on it, the shape was slowly shifting. (credit:Allyson Grant/ Photo by Janine Armstrong)
Pregnant Belly Art(04 of10)
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Berry says that one client loved roses so much she decided to turn herself into one. (credit:Vonetta Berry)
Pregnant Belly Art(05 of10)
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Some women want a more permanent reminder of their pregnancy, like Atlanta mom Tisha DeShields who had a belly cast made of each of her four kids. Because she was married to former major league baseball player Delino DeShields, the first belly cast had a baseball slant. But ended up being prophetic as the kid was drafted into baseball when he was 17. (credit:Artist: Maurice Evans; Photo: Images by Rainey)
Pregnant Belly Art(06 of10)
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DeShields sells personal belly casting kits and gets some strange requests, such as the woman who thought her pregnant torso resembled a lion. (credit:Artist: Grace Kisa; Photo: Original Belly Works)
Pregnancy Art Photos(07 of10)
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Artist Brian Saaby uses pregnant Signe's stomach as a canvas as part of an photo exhibition Aug. 12, 2011 in Round Tower of Copenhagen. Twenty artists use twenty pregnant womens stomachs as canvases in the favour of the organization Maternity Worldwide. Art photographers Marie Wengler, Marte Holten and Karoline Tira Liberkind will later exhibit the pictures of the painted stomachs at Gallery Copenhagen Art. Revenues from sale of the photos will be donated to the organization Maternity Worldwide, whose purpose is to save women and childrens lives during pregnancy and childbirth in Ethiopia. (credit:Jen Noergaard Larsen, EPA / Landov)
Pregnancy Art Photos(08 of10)
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Danish artist Stine Bo uses pregnant Siri's stomach as a canvass as part of an photo exhibition, Aug. 12, 2011 in Round Tower of Copenhagen. Twenty artists use twenty pregnant womens stomachs as canvases in the favour of the organization Maternity Worldwide. Art photographers Marie Wengler, Marte Holten and Karoline Tira Liberkind will later exhibit the pictures of the painted stomachs at Gallery Copenhagen Art. Revenues from sale of the photos will be donated to the organization Maternity Worldwide, whose purpose is to save women and childrens lives during pregnancy and childbirth in Ethiopia. (credit:Jens Noergaard Larsen, EPA / Landov)
Pregnancy Art Photos(09 of10)
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Danish artist Thomas Christoffersen uses pregnant Sidsel Gronvald's stomach as a canvass as part of an photo exhibition, Aug. 12, 2011 in Round Tower of Copenhagen. Twenty artists use twenty pregnant womens stomachs as canvases in the favour of the organization Maternity Worldwide. Art photographers Marie Wengler, Marte Holten and Karoline Tira Liberkind will later exhibit the pictures of the painted stomachs at Gallery Copenhagen Art. Revenues from sale of the photos will be donated to the organization Maternity Worldwide, whose purpose is to save women and childrens lives during pregnancy and childbirth in Ethiopia. (credit:Jens Noergaard Larsen, EPA / Landov)
Pregnancy Art Photos(10 of10)
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Danish artist Jan Klein uses pregnant Nanna Kragens stomach as a canvas as part of an photo exhibition, Aug. 12, 2011 in Round Tower of Copenhagen. Twenty artists use twenty pregnant womens stomachs as canvases in the favour of the organization Maternity Worldwide. Art photographers Marie Wengler, Marte Holten and Karoline Tira Liberkind will later exhibit the pictures of the painted stomachs at Gallery Copenhagen Art. Revenues from sale of the photos will be donated to the organization Maternity Worldwide, whose purpose is to save women and childrens lives during pregnancy and childbirth in Ethiopia. (credit:Jens Noergaard Larsen, EPA / Landov)

Many times, women have their bellies painted as part of a baby shower ritual. Other times, they are done for charity, such as a recent exhibition done on the bellies of 20 pregnant women by Danish art photographers Marie Wengler, Marte Holten and Karoline Tira Liberkind to raise funds for Maternity Worldwide, a charity that strives to save women's and children's lives during pregnancy and childbirth in Ethiopia.

Regardless of the reason, Vancouver-based body painter Allyson Grant says that painting a pregnant belly is an intimate experience for both the mother and the artist.

"I was amazed and in awe when I worked on my first belly –- a woman who was about seven and a half months pregnant," Grant said. "During the two hours I worked with her, the shape was slowly shifting. It was profound to be that aware of a new life inside of her."

As beautiful as that can be, Berry says dealing with the little nipper is the biggest challenge of belly painting.

"When it's moving constantly, it creates this odd point," Berry said. "You don't know if it's an elbow or knee sticking out. The kicks are like hiccups. You don't know what they're doing inside."

Although belly painting is an artistic way for a woman to say she's with child, it's not very permanent since the paints are washable.

For moms who want to have a memento to guilt their kids in the future, belly casting is a more permanent answer, according to Atlanta-based mom Tisha DeShields, who sells body casting kits that allow moms to immortalize their bulging tummies in plaster or fiberglass and either paint the forms themselves or have a professional artist do it.

Some women turn their stomachs into watermelons or strawberries and even ballerinas or butterflies -- but some do far more.

"One woman had her belly made to look like a lion," said DeShields, the ex-wife of former major league baseball player Delino DeShields. "Her breasts were the lion's eyes."

Because the belly casts are permanent, DeShields says they are used in unusual ways.

"One person turned her belly cast as a headstone over the place where she buried the baby's placenta," she said.

Although it makes to sense to do a belly painting or belly cast when the bulge is at its biggest, Berry recommends moms who want to give their belly to art do so in their eight month of pregnancy. ""You're full and round, but there's no distress," Berry explained.

Grant concurs and says she learned that lesson the hard way.

"One of my belly paintings was for a woman who was to give birth any day so I was a bit nervous about that one!" she laughed. "There was a lot of movement under the brush!"

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