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‘Cut From the Same Cloth’; The Fabric of our Lives

Tuesday, 22 April, 2025

Artist, Lorna Donlon spent 12 months weaving a 1.7 sqm tapestry in-situ in UCD Conway Institute

An art/science collaboration engaging with women in minority communities

A unique exhibition, funded by Research Ireland, merging art, science, and community launched in (opens in a new window)The Hunt Museum, Limerick on 24 April 2025 by (opens in a new window)Lynn Scarff, Director, National Museum of Ireland ahead of a nationwide tour.

Entitled ‘Cut From the Same Cloth’, the multimedia exhibition is the culmination of a project curated by artist, Lorna Donlon in partnership with women in minority communities across Ireland and biomedical researchers from UCD Conway Institute. 

Group of people smilingPictured L-R: Lynn Scarrff, Director, National Museum of Ireland; Prof. Helen Roche, Director, UCD Conway Institute; Dr Sara Dakir, UCD; Nicky Read, project coordinator; Dr Joanna Drabinska, UCD; Teresa Crowley, Director, The Hunt Museum; Deputy Mayor Cllr Maria Donoghue, artist Lorna Donlan, Cllr Azad Talukder, Elaine Quinn, UCD; Shabnam Rafi Ahmed, Anna Wedderburn, UCD.

Through a series of ten gatherings in community settings around Ireland in 2024, women shared personal stories about fabrics significant to their cultural traditions, customs and lived experience. These ‘get-togethers’ provided an opportunity for researchers to share the parallels between patterns in textiles and those seen at the cellular level in health research. 

Inspired by these stories, Lorna Donlon created a handwoven tapestry that bridges personal and scientific narratives through fabric and is complemented in the exhibition by research textiles, photographs by Anthony Hobbs and video narratives by Crannóg Media. Each fabric story is a doorway into the pattern of a person’s life or of their life’s work.

The tapestry includes a readable, embedded woven QR code that links to the digital version of the exhibition ((opens in a new window)https://cutfromthesamecloth.org/), marrying an ancient technique with a contemporary technology.

Women smiling in front of tapestryPictured (left to right): Guest speaker, Lynn Scarff, Director, National Museum of Ireland with Lorna Donlon, artist.

Lorna Donlon, artist, ‘Cut From the Same Cloth’ said; “Creating this tapestry has been a deeply meaningful process, weaving together not just fabric but the stories of individuals who are often overlooked in research. By reimagining biomedical data as art, I hope to show how science and personal experience are connected, reminding us all that every thread in our community matters.”

(opens in a new window)Professor Amanda McCann, Conway Fellow, academic project lead and Chair, the ‘Patient Voice in Health Research’ initiative said; “Through this project, we want to create an inclusive environment where minority communities can actively be involved in and contribute to the progress of health research, enriching both the research landscape and the broader community. Cloth allowed us to find common ground in an equitable, open and transparent way”.

The biomedical researchers involved in this project are working in disease areas such as ovarian, prostate and breast cancer, diabetes, epilepsy, nutrition in pregnancy, bacterial vaccines, motor neuron disease, skin burn wounds, rare respiratory diseases and Alzheimer’s disease.

(opens in a new window)Dr Arman Rahman, Conway Fellow and Precision Oncology Ireland who is part of the project team said; “People from minority ethnic groups can often experience poorer health than the rest of the population. As part of the ‘Patient Voice in Health Research’ initiative, UCD Conway researchers connect and engage with minority communities about research developments in health and understand how research can consider their community's needs.”

Celine Fitzgerald, Interim CEO of (opens in a new window)Research Ireland said; “We are very proud to support this project through the Research Ireland Discover programme. This project is a wonderful example of how the intersection of art and science can bolster inclusivity in research. Not only is the work on display at this exhibition beautiful and intricate, but it helps to amplify minority voices in such a universal and moving way.”
Alongside the exhibition, there will be a series of free events featuring insights from Lorna Donlon, researchers, community participants and Elaine Quinn (project lead, UCD Conway Institute).

For further details on the exhibition and how to register for events, visit (opens in a new window)https://cutfromthesamecloth.org/

UCD Conway Institute of Biomolecular and Biomedical Research

University College Dublin, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland.
T: +353 1 716 6700 | E: conway@ucd.ie