![]() ![]() Each of these aspects point to important ways that reproductive desire and time shape the labour of reproductive workers, highlighting temporal constraints to assisted reproduction and limits to ART as a solution to delayed reproduction and the biological clock. My findings point to four important ART time-related issues: (i) women desiring to extend their own ‘biological clocks’ via surrogacy (ii) significant time being needed to achieve and sustain third-party pregnancy (iii) women extending their total reproductive time via repeat surrogacy ‘journeys’ and (iv) temporal constraints to surrogacy reproduction regarding time of year, the day-to-day time effort, the number of surrogacy journeys, the total number of pregnancies, and surrogates’ age and the ages of their children. ![]() Based on interview data with gestational surrogates, I propose a new concept of the ‘ART clock’ to capture how time shapes the experiences of reproductive workers in the US fertility clinic. In this study, I analyse how surrogates in the USA understand their own bioavailability for others’ reproductive needs in the commercial ART market vis-à-vis their own reproductive trajectories. COLLECTING: Wells, Richardson & Co.Conceptualizations of the ‘biological clock’ in popular imaginary in the USA centre on the temporal limits of fertility, with assisted reproductive technology (ART) an increasingly proposed answer to these constraints (at least in the public imaginary).COLLECTING: retro kitchen illustrations (10).COLLECTING: presidential memorabelia (8).ARTIST: TMNK - The Me Nobody Knows (17).ARTIST: Mary Morris Steiner Lawrence (5).ARTIST: Deaf Performing Artists Network (1).ART BY TECHNIQUE: stone lithography (6).ART BY TECHNIQUE: reverse painting on glass (5).ART BY TECHNIQUE: chromolithography (9).Please enable JavaScript if you would like to comment on this blog. There's more, but I'll leave that for another post. Tove Ohlander also will custom etch the bowls and other pieces that she and her partner Rich Ahrentzen make. Great, perfect holiday gifts, they can be a tabletop decoration, or hang from a tree or mantle. But I've got a bunch here now.ĪO! Glass, whose retail shop is right here at PSAW (separate store - common roof) are in high production for their very popular little Sno Folk. No two alike, only while stock lasts since buying them is a random operation. I've been collecting typewriter tins and cigarette tins, lovely for both their shapes and graphics. At $45, this is a gift that will be loved for generations. in Nebraska, but I'm lucky enough to be able to sell his lamp-work jewelry. Marc used to live in Burlington and his glass studio was one of my favorite places. No two of these pendants by Marc Kornbluh are alike. At $20 a pop, these are also a fun and charming gift. ![]() They inspired me to offer PSAW mini prints by PSAW artists, made to fit the frames. Made of pure acrylic and tiny magnets by a small company in New York, (although manufactured in Thailand) these are the original Magnet Frame. At $28 these are a sensation and very popular with my customers. Not new to PSAW but one of my favorites, the Canetti Museum Magnet Frame. I also have Lotte Jansdotter and Paul Frank as well as assorted classic botanical images.Ĭanetti Museum magnet frames and PSAW mini prints Above are some sets with images by Wayne Thiebaud, Andy Warhol, Geninne D. Now that our local paperie, Scribbles, has closed (alas) I'm trying to fill the void a tiny bit. Mostly I've collected postcards and notecards, but anything with pretty images and shapes will catch my eye. I've been a stationery lover my whole life. Notecards, portfolios, labels, sticky notes etc. Click the small image and it will pop up!
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