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Motherhood Hit Me Like a Train Half Speed #2 abstract painting by Rachael Grad
Motherhood Hit Me Like a Train Half Speed paintings by artist Rachael Grad
Motherhood Hit Me LIke a Train paintings by artist Rachael Grad on view in gallery
Motherhood Hit Me LIke a Train paintings by artist Rachael Grad on view in gallery at the J

Painting: Motherhood Hit Me Like a Train, Half Speed #2

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Motherhood Hit Me Like a Train, Half Speed #2, 2024, 12 x 12," an original Watercolour on Canvas painting.

Motherhood Hit Me Like a Train, Half Speed #1 is an original 2024 painting from Rachael Grad’s ongoing and deeply personal series that reflects the complex, physical, and emotional terrain of motherhood.

Created by rolling a toy train through watercolour across canvas, this small-scale piece captures the tension between momentum and fatigue. The “half speed” concept evokes slowed-down motion, mirroring the exhaustion and fragmentation often experienced by new parents—yet the composition remains vibrant and full of energy, speaking to the persistence and creativity that emerge in moments of stillness.

Painting Medium & Technique:

  • Watercolour on gallery-wrapped canvas
  • Painted using toy trains
  • Rich, layered textures formed in short, deliberate sessions—echoing a caregiver’s interrupted time
  • Ready to hang unframed

Artwork Details

  • Original, one-of-a-kind artwork
  • Size: 12″ × 12″ × 1"
  • Signed by the artist on the back of the painting
  • Comes with a Certificate of Authenticity
  • Ships ready to hang

Please note that this painting on canvas is not framed. Framing is available for an additional fee. Delivery is free within the Greater Toronto area.  Other locations may incur additional shipping costs. 

The Inspiration and Background Story of the Abstract Painting

Rolling a toy train across my artwork is a not so subtle metaphor for being a mother and artist. Motherhood hit me like a train. My art completely changed course when I became a mother. Toys have taken over my home and my artwork and they are always in mind and in my way. So for this artwork I tried to reverse the ubiquitous toy train and turn it into a paintbrush.

My children often join in on my painting and drawing, and other artwork. Usually I do not appreciate this overtaking or co-collaboration in my art. Over the years, I have tried to accept that children thrive on creative art projects, so I have started incorporating them into certain projects, both for family fun and for school (theirs and mine!).

To express motherhood in body and gesture, I used a small toy train with six wheels to make fluid marks across canvas. I tested various brush strokes and differing marks with the toy train, including quick pushing of the train to letting it move on its own across the page. I decided on a sweeping arm motion as my one mark. I found the rolling motion to be a more satisfying way of using the train, as compared to dabbing it like a stamp.

This chosen rolling motion required loading up significant water and pigment for each mark run. In order for the paint colour to show up on the paper, I had to heavily press down on the toy train during the entire rolling mark movement. Though I heavily pressed into the train for the duration of the motion, I was usually unable to equally apply the paint throughout the same mark. I made the large arm movements both while standing over the paper and also while sitting or kneeling beside it.

The mark making proved to be unexpectedly tiring for my arm and back. Ironically, working in this way caused the same physical exhaustion, aches and pains as those I experienced after childbirth, as a mother to a newborn. I had to work in short bursts and take many breaks while creating this painting. Resting alone and respite from one’s own kids is also highly recommended when mothering.

Read about my first  Motherhood Hit Me Like a Train painting, which was sold to a New York art collector, in this Blog Post: Recently Sold Painting

Artwork from my "Motherhood Hit Me Like a Train" painting series is in the permanent collections of the Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), Bank of Montreal, Altree Developments and private collections in New York and Toronto.