Women and Domesticity is an evolving collection of over 100 hand-embroidered dusters made by members of the public through a participatory and collaborative research process designed to elicit women’s perspectives on narratives and traditions of the home. The dusters are created through an invitation to stitch messages, sculpt and personalise iconic, traditional dusters, allowing participants to respond and add to the exhibited collection. Marr’s participatory approach elicits autoethnographic stories through the haptic perception of cloth and the rhythm of piercing and stitching, establishing the practice as a phenomenological embodiment of experience. The research is underpinned by theories of narrative, phenomenology and autoethnography ...
My contribution was an embroidered yellow duster, exploring the notion of drawing with thread as a m...
An exhibition of selected dusters from the collection.This research output consists of a collection ...
Housework, Gender and Subjectivity: Cultures of Domesticity is an exhibition inspired by the work of...
The entire collection of dusters was exhibited from 4th - 5th August 2018 to coincide with the museu...
Women and domesticity - investigating common experiences and perspectives through creative collabora...
An exhibition of a selection of dusters from the Women & Domesticity - What's your Perspective c...
This research output consists of a collection of hand embroidered dusters created through an on-goin...
Workshop:Women and domesticity – What’s Your Perspective? Investigating common experiences and persp...
My area of study sits within creative arts practice-based research, underpinned by theories of drawi...
‘Expectations of domesticity are inherently female, whilst stitch both empowers and reflects the his...
The rise and acknowledgement of ‘craftivism’ has re-established the power that stitch has to hold an...
Over the past ten years I have transformed the duster, a humble yellow cleaning cloth, into an objec...
This paper explores the idea that drawing with thread upon duster can be a means of facilitating the...
The goal of this project is to explore the common domestic experiences and expectations of the moder...
Artist, designer and lecturer Vanessa Marr selected traditional dusters as a metaphor for domesticit...
My contribution was an embroidered yellow duster, exploring the notion of drawing with thread as a m...
An exhibition of selected dusters from the collection.This research output consists of a collection ...
Housework, Gender and Subjectivity: Cultures of Domesticity is an exhibition inspired by the work of...
The entire collection of dusters was exhibited from 4th - 5th August 2018 to coincide with the museu...
Women and domesticity - investigating common experiences and perspectives through creative collabora...
An exhibition of a selection of dusters from the Women & Domesticity - What's your Perspective c...
This research output consists of a collection of hand embroidered dusters created through an on-goin...
Workshop:Women and domesticity – What’s Your Perspective? Investigating common experiences and persp...
My area of study sits within creative arts practice-based research, underpinned by theories of drawi...
‘Expectations of domesticity are inherently female, whilst stitch both empowers and reflects the his...
The rise and acknowledgement of ‘craftivism’ has re-established the power that stitch has to hold an...
Over the past ten years I have transformed the duster, a humble yellow cleaning cloth, into an objec...
This paper explores the idea that drawing with thread upon duster can be a means of facilitating the...
The goal of this project is to explore the common domestic experiences and expectations of the moder...
Artist, designer and lecturer Vanessa Marr selected traditional dusters as a metaphor for domesticit...
My contribution was an embroidered yellow duster, exploring the notion of drawing with thread as a m...
An exhibition of selected dusters from the collection.This research output consists of a collection ...
Housework, Gender and Subjectivity: Cultures of Domesticity is an exhibition inspired by the work of...