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Dr Ellen Sampson

Assistant Professor

Department: Northumbria School of Design, Arts and Creative Industries

Ellen Sampson is an artist and material culture researcher whose work explores the relationships between clothing and bodily experience, both in museums and archives and in everyday life. Using film, photography, and writing, she examines the ways that garmnets become records of lived experience: how people and the things they wear become entwined.Sampson has a PhD from the Royal College of Art, London and was 2018/19 Polaire Weissman fellow at the Costume Institute of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and 2019/20 Professorial Fellow at University for the Creative Arts.

Ellen Sampson

The Afterlives Of Clothes

'The Afterlives Of Clothes', was initially developed while on a Fellowship at theCostume Institute of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2018-19) and an artist’s residency at Bard Graduate Center, New York (2019- 2020). The projectthe project brings together archival research with auto-ethnographic writing, image, and filmmakingto explore the affect of damaged garments in museum collections.Focusing on accessories, objects which Jones and Stallybrass term “detachable parts” of the self, it seeks to highlight the bodily practices of wearing and maintaining clothes, clothing as lived and embodied experience, in objects where littleor nobiographical evidence exists. Asking howin a field where absent bodies and narratives are already understood as problematic,these traces might re-contextualize objects and bring into focus bodies and narratives which would otherwise be excluded from display.

Curative Things

Curative Things is a collaborative project organised by theThing Power Research Group(Leeds Arts University),Thinking Through Things(Wellcome Trust Funded Project, Durham University), andFashion Research Network.

Bringing together new scholarship at the intersections of medical humanities, fashion research and visual arts practice, thisProject exploresthe relationship between wearable objects and human health, with particular emphasis on how artists are creatively responding to and rethinking these relations.Wearable objects might include, but are not limited to: clothing, footwear, headwear, jewellery, implants, prostheses or physical aids; things that have the potential to restrict, contain, embrace or extend the body; things that we wear and things that wear us

Enclothed Knowledges

This project explores the role of practice-based research in Fashion Studies, asking how knowledge generated through practice can challenge, critique and advance the field? In his 2017 paper, Ben Barry uses the term 'enclothed knowledge' to capture the multi-modal and multi-sensory knowledges, which acts of wearing and making clothes produce. This panel takes the idea of 'enclothed knowledge' a starting point to examine the role and position of practice-based research in fashion studies. It asks what we know through making fashion objects, images and exhibitions – and how these knowledges might differ from those produced through more traditional academic research practices?

Historically there has been a division in both fashion academia and education between those who study through making and those who study through observation. However, the 'embodied turn', and attendant reorientation of the field has revealed the porous nature of these divisions, the ways that in 'fashion thinking' theory and practice are often intertwined. In the context of current attempts to define and formalize the field, this project seeks to critically examine the role of practice-based fashion research in fashion studies. It asks how methodologies of making and wearing clothes intersect with and expand upon current concerns with embodiment, tacit knowledge and the sensory experience of dress.

Fashion Research Network

I am co-founder of Fashion Research Network,an interdisciplinary network for researchers in fashion studies. Through collaboration we facilitate, disseminate and promote conversations which critically examine the nature of fashion studies and the parameters of the field. FRN brings together researchers from multiple subject areas and institutions to critically examine the role of dress in society. Founded a point when the field was both less established and less defined, FRN has played a key part in shaping understanding of fashion studies as a diverse and dynamic field in the UK. We work to facilitate conversations and collaboration between those who research through practice and those who research using traditional methodologies. FRN is built on a model of collaboration, working with a diverse range of partners to deliver events. Past partners include FIT, University of Brighton, National Portrait Gallery and ICA. Since 2013 FRN have convened 11 symposia, and numerous seminars, reading groups, and curator talks- building a vibrant and resilient network of researchers

  • Isabel Mundigo-Moore Love-Clothes: Clothing, Narratives and Emotions Held in Middle-Aged Women’s Wardrobes in the UK (United Kingdom) Start Date: 01/10/2021
  • Nikola Markovic Clothes and Familial Sensory Postmemories in the Balkans: Exploring (Post)Memory-Based Design/Archival Practice Start Date: 08/01/2024
  • Wen Jiang Provisional title of the thesis: Living in Harmony: Exploring the Co-existence between British and Chinese Design Elements by Integrating British Flower Symbolism in Making Dresses and Jewellery Start Date: 05/04/2022 End Date: 19/11/2022

  • PhD August 31 2016
  • Fashion MA February 01 2009
  • anthropology BSc (Hons) July 01 2003

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