PhD at Manchester School of Art (2014)

‘Folk is a slippery and divisive term, with some uncomfortable associations. However, for me it doesn’t represent a specific vernacular or style, nor a set of rustic artefacts once gathered by Victorian collectors on bicycles and promptly preserved in aspic. It’s what can happen when people, alone or together, and regardless of anything, engage in cultural practices they create for themselves.’

Social art and / as research undertaken with contemporary folk arts groups in the northwest (2012-14)

Previous
Previous

Chasing the Harestail