“ I feel there is nothing more truly artistic than to love people.” -Van Gogh

I am Juliana Laury

& I am a creative caretaker.

I take care of myself, my family, and my community through acts of creativity. 

I believe that all of life is art.

I, like you, feel things deeply. I never stop wondering why I’m here at this particular moment in time. 
I make art to process my place in the world. It is what all artists are here to do- to hold the mirror to themselves first, then turn the mirror to the world at large. 

Juliana’s Debut Poetry Collection: “Postpartum

-now available for pre-order-

"I felt both seen and transported by this collection. I felt the mother that I am, got a glimpse at the mother I’ll be, and learned a touch of the way others feel about their mothering. When I have a physical copy of this, it will live by my bedside, and I will pick it up and read from it when I need to deeply feel a connection to all my fellow mothers." - Rebecca

“Domestic Poetry”

Poetry Written for Mothers, by a Mother

  • I Didn’t Get A Break Today

    You Said

    As If

    You Expected One

    As If

    You Could Stop

    Every Need

    From Everyone

    Including Yourself

    As If You Could Count

    On A Soft Warm Bed

    Halfway Through

    To “Recharge Your Batteries”

    As Your Mom Used To Say

    But That Isn’t How It Works

    You’re The Parent Now

    And You’ve Just Announced

    That You Have To Poop

    So You Could Write

    This Poem.


  • What Gift Says

    Thank You For Cleaning The Shit Off The Walls

    What Gift Makes Up For The Sleepless Nights

    The Lines Stretched Into Skin

    The Hair Clogging The Drain?

    What Sale Could Possibly Compensate

    For A Career Put On Pause

    For Those First Precious Years

    Before Someone Else Is In Charge

    Of An Entire Education

    Is There A Card On The Rack

    That Speaks To The Hope Of Morning

    And Desperation Of Night

    A Wreath To Adorn The Door

    Of The Home That Feels Both Like A Prison And A Sanctuary

    It’s Endless Loop Of Days So Poetically Represented By A String Of Evergreen

    Here, I Wrapped This For You

    This Totem In My Hands

    Is Nothing

    Is Nothing

    Is Nothing

    But Me Trying To Say

    Thank You

  • What Did You Do Today

    You Ask

    I Want To Tell You The Truth

    That I Called My Friends

    That I Took A Nap In The Car

    That I Took A Walk

    That I Blasted My Favorite Songs From High School And Sang Over Them With Tears Streaming Down My Face

    That I Stared At The Way The Wind Blows The Branches

    That I Looked At The Clouds Moving In The Sky

    That I Walked Into A Bookstore Just To Feel The Spines Run Along On My Hand

    Because All These Things Are What I Needed Today

    But I Don’t Feel Like I Can Tell You That

    Because How Can You Ask Someone

    Please

    Watch My Children

    So That I Can Hear The Sound Of My Own Breath Again

    Instead

    I Keep This All To Myself

    Because I Live In A World

    Where It Is Not Productive To Touch The Earth With Cracked Fingernails

    The Days In Which I Had Time To Stop Are Over

    You Are A Parent Now, They Say.

    It Is Your Child’s Turn To Play

    And When They Stop And Dig Holes In The Ground

    You Are Supposed To Say

    Hurry Home, We Have To Go

    I Cannot Dig For Worms With You

    It Is No Longer My Place

    For I Must Feed And Clothe And Work

    That You May Notice The Birdsong

    Without Me.


  • I Lay On The Bed

    In The Home Of My Youth

    The Sounds Are The Same As They’ve Always Been

    My Mother’s Voice Through The Vents

    My Father’s Work In The Yard

    I Know How The Light Hits Every Doorknob

    Every Bedspread

    At Every Time Of Day

    In Every Season

    Of Every Year

    I Know Which Windows Don’t Have A Shade

    And Which Curtains My Mother Has Replaced

    I Left In Search Of My Own Life

    I Bought My Own Bedspreads

    My Own Curtains

    And Returned With Arms Full Of Children

    And A Heart Full Of Gratitude

    For When I Lay On This Bed Now

    I Hear My Children’s Laughter Through The Vents

    I Hear The Hum Of Their Toys

    I Lay In The Bed Of My Youth

    With The Exhaustion Of A Mother

    Knowing That This Is The One Place

    In The Entire World

    That I Get To Be

    A Child.

  • I Kiss His Shoulder

    Rest My Lips Along The Curve Of His Neck

    He Folds Himself Around Me

    Limbs Too Long To Crawl Up

    And Fit Back Inside

    Six Years Gone Since Our Bodies Split Into Two

    His Size Shocking Me Every Day

    This Body That I Made

    This Human That I Grew

    Can Barely Fit In My Lap

    Anymore

    And Yet

    I Still Ache For The Softness Of His Body

    I Still Hunger For The Taste Of His Skin On My Lips

    Just As I Did In The Days Of Rocking Chairs And Breast Milk

    Just As I Did In The Sleepless Blur Of My Own Infancy

    The Fissure Of Our Bodies Birthed Us Both

    And Here He Stands

    Six Years Later

    Reminding Me

    That I, Too, Am Sprouting Like A Bud

    Long And Thin And Sure

    For Every Time He Folds Himself Into Me

    He Shows Me

    That The Body Of A Mother

    Never

    Ever

    Stops

    Growing ,

    Too.


  • I Did The Laundry

    And Took Out The Trash

    While You Did The Dishes

    And Fed Our Children.

    I Thought To Myself,

    Why,

    This Is The Work Of Living.

    It Is As Though My Tired Body

    Is Connected To All Those Before Me

    For When I Bend To Task

    I Feel The Shadow Of Thousands

    Of Millions

    Of Billions

    Behind My Back.

    They Rub My Knots From My Shoulders

    Brush The Sweat From My Brow

    And Say To Me

    O, Dear One

    We Have Pushed Through The Barriers Of Time

    To Tell You

    That You Are Not The First

    To Hold Each Day As A Trophy

    Hard Fought And Hard Won

    Knowing That Tomorrow

    It All Starts Again.

    We Are Not So Different, You And I

    We

    Have Lived

    The Work

    Of Living

  • You’ve Never Seen My Hair Down

    Last Night The Pain In My Scalp Led Me To Unveil It Before You

    It Felt So Good To Massage My Roots

    After Years Of Tying It Up

    Holding It Back From Your Grasp

    You Cocked Your Head And Smiled

    “So Beautiful” You Said

    I Felt A Tear Forming At The Corner Of My Eye

    You Reached Out To Touch It

    My Instinct Has Been To Pull Back

    But This Time I Let You Stroke The Length Of My Hair

    “So Long” You Said

    You Had No Idea That I Had Long Hair

    I Had No Idea Myself

    I Had Let The Faucet Of Time Run My Split Ends Down The Drain

    And So This...

    This Was A Really Nice Moment

    It Was As If You Were Seeing Me Differently

    It Was As If

    For The First Time

    You Weren’t Just Seeing Me As Your Mother

    You Were Seeing Me As A Woman

  • What Is The Night If Not Another Place For A Mother To Give?

    To Contort Herself To Fit The Needs Of Her Children, Her Spouse

    To Pretzel Herself Around Bodies And Cries

    What Is Rest If Not Another Landscape We Yearn For, An Eden Always Out Of Reach, A Mirage Before Our Tired Eyes?

    Motherhood Robs Us Of Sleep Early

    Before The Great Exit

    Before The Hope Becomes Reality

    It Marks You With Tired Eyes And Frazzled Bones

    It’s Pillowed And Soaking Leftovers A Laughing Stock For Anyone And Everyone Whose Body Has Never Made A Person From Scratch

    In The Story Of A Mother, Sleep Is The Villain

    Always Taunting

    Always Laughing In The Dark Corners Of Another Endless Night

    Another Hour Alone

    Here, Our Heroine Battles

    Here, Our Heroine Cries

    Unseen

    Unheard

    Again

    And Again

    And Again

    The Sleep Of A Mother Is An Oxymoron

    It’s Just A Poem

    Written By A Mother

    In The Middle Of The Night

    Who Can’t

    For The Life Of Her

    Fucking Sleep.

All of my work circles the question of preservation.

Timeline

Birth->Age 13

I was born an artist. 
Like all kids, I wanted to know the WHY behind everything. (I am still asking that question every day, even now)
I was lucky enough to have had parents who fostered my natural curiosities and guided an expansive childhood. My mother is a teacher and my father is an engineer, and they showed me that life is meant to be FUN. Everything we did, even if it was going to WaWa for a breakfast sandwich before heading hitting the road to visit family in New York, was an adventure. My parents are "Yes" people. They live with their arms wide open to what life throws at them, and the people they meet along the way.

26->29

My husband and I both always dreamed of becoming parents, and on November 14, 2017 our first son was born. 17.5 months later, our second son was born. 14 months after that, our third son was born.
While we had both wanted a big family, we were taken aback by their rapid arrivals. It all felt like a whirlwind- like a story I was telling, not actually living. Now, having three boys so close in age is a AMAZING. But I always say it was like ripping off a band-aid, and to say there were some serious growing pains in this time would be an understatement.

13->22

My life changed the day my parents bought me a disposable camera at CVS. It was sitting on the warm pavement of a church parking lot that I took the very first photograph of true emotion- my childhood friend throwing her head back in laughter. For me, this is when the lightbulb went off. This was when I discovered that cameras were magic.
I thrust myself wholeheartedly into photography. With the support of my parents and high school, I learned darkroom photography completely on my own (pre-Youtube). Suddenly, all of life was a picture waiting to be taken. I photographed everything and everyone around me. I had a camera with me at all times. It was a grounding tool. It was how I began to explore all those WHY(s) in my own way. 

29->32

During this time of personal upheaval, I began to explore new forms of art-making. 
Children challenge us to grow new limbs (this feels literal and figurative, most days). Leaving my thriving business behind felt like leaving a piece of myself behind, and my sense of identity was shaken in this new landscape. I was being ushered into a new era of my life, one that asked me to embrace that my creative practice was no longer something I gave to others, but something I gave to myself. 
It was only while having children that I began to embrace the term “Artist”. I came to peace with the mantra “Life is Art” (see video above). I reached for new tools: writing, painting, knitting, encaustic, poetry- and more! I was no longer "just a photographer", I was a multi-faceted being! I was a creator at my core! This is truly one of the greatest gifts of my life- the way that motherhood catalyzed my expansion of self in every way possible. 

22->26

After graduating from Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia with my BFA in Photography, I hit the ground running living my dream. Newly married and released into the world with the enthusiasm of a young person with their whole life ahead of them, I poured every waking hour into building a business that was representative of my values and my beliefs. My camera opened the world up to me, and because of this work I traveled and met hundreds of new people every year. I was a glorious time. 

Now

My husband's least favorite question to get at work is, "So, what does your wife do?" Recently, he told me he's answering with, "She spreads joy." I love that. 
I am no longer creating one kind of art. Which makes answering that question (and creating a website) tricky to the linear mindset. Thankfully, I am surrounded by people who see me, support me, and love me for the multi-passionate woman and artist I am. Motherhood is the center of all I do, and being an artist mother is as challenging and inspiring as I'd always hoped (maybe more so). I am still obsessed with the same questions I've always been, but now I walk around those questions in a circle and try to explore them from new angles. I create art that can be read, heard, and touched. I make art that is sometimes flat and sometimes structural. No matter the outcome, the process is what ties my work together as uniquely mine.

Art makes me better ->

Sharing my art makes the people around me better->

Those people go out into the world and make the world better

Check out more of my…

 

Published In

PXV Art Mag
Issue 01,02, &04

Tillage Magazine
coming soon

In her Studio

Spring 2024

Want to learn my encaustic process for free?

Listen to Flow:

A little audio adventure