As an adoptee, I am haunted by what Lifton (2009) calls the Ghost Kingdom, a place filled with the spectres of the ancestors I have been disconnected from. Derrida (1993), with his notion of hauntology, tells us that we must learn to speak to ghosts, and that by doing so we will learn to live. I am on a journey to speak to the ancestors of my birth father who were Ngāi Tahu (Māori), and through this, to make meaning in my present and future (Carsten, 2000). I am using embroidery as a medium to speak to, and with, my great-great-grandmother, Elizabeth (Fitzpatrick & Bell, 2016), working in a craft vernacular that would have been deeply familiar to her. This paper will discuss how the methodology of autoethnography, informed by adoption s...
The reader is invited to view the piecing together of a patchwork quilt. Unfurling carefully tacked-...
This research project explores Indigenous dispossession and cultural hybridity through an immersive...
Until the middle of the nineteenth century most American girls embroidered as least one needlework s...
As an adoptee, I am haunted by what Lifton (2009) calls the Ghost Kingdom, a place filled with the s...
This research project uses painting to explore the untold narratives associated with dowry objects b...
The following paper is written support for the STAY IN TOUCH exhibition on display at Special Projec...
This paper explores my work and the connection between stories and stitching. It seeks to find meani...
My area of study sits within creative arts practice-based research, underpinned by theories of drawi...
My PhD research draws on the traditions of still life painting and domestic embroidery to ...
Autoethnographic reflective research methodologies are used to explore the self and ancestral textil...
The relationships of memory to place, and of place to body, assert haptic memory and sensory knowing...
The purpose of this qualitative art-based autoethnographic research study is to examine the lived ex...
This paper examines contemporary needlework on vintage handkerchiefs, identifying a new genre of fem...
The present paper is devoted to the exploration of Puerto Rican female identity through individual a...
Objects can evoke our most vivid memories and sensory emotions, through the stories that have been e...
The reader is invited to view the piecing together of a patchwork quilt. Unfurling carefully tacked-...
This research project explores Indigenous dispossession and cultural hybridity through an immersive...
Until the middle of the nineteenth century most American girls embroidered as least one needlework s...
As an adoptee, I am haunted by what Lifton (2009) calls the Ghost Kingdom, a place filled with the s...
This research project uses painting to explore the untold narratives associated with dowry objects b...
The following paper is written support for the STAY IN TOUCH exhibition on display at Special Projec...
This paper explores my work and the connection between stories and stitching. It seeks to find meani...
My area of study sits within creative arts practice-based research, underpinned by theories of drawi...
My PhD research draws on the traditions of still life painting and domestic embroidery to ...
Autoethnographic reflective research methodologies are used to explore the self and ancestral textil...
The relationships of memory to place, and of place to body, assert haptic memory and sensory knowing...
The purpose of this qualitative art-based autoethnographic research study is to examine the lived ex...
This paper examines contemporary needlework on vintage handkerchiefs, identifying a new genre of fem...
The present paper is devoted to the exploration of Puerto Rican female identity through individual a...
Objects can evoke our most vivid memories and sensory emotions, through the stories that have been e...
The reader is invited to view the piecing together of a patchwork quilt. Unfurling carefully tacked-...
This research project explores Indigenous dispossession and cultural hybridity through an immersive...
Until the middle of the nineteenth century most American girls embroidered as least one needlework s...