
Murray is a radical multidisciplinary artist whose practice explores identity, human connection, and empowerment through an intersectional feminist lens. Working across sculpture, textiles, wearable art, and participatory workshops, they use diverse materials and processes to challenge societal norms, celebrate marginalised voices, and foster inclusive, transformative dialogue.
Central to Murray’s work is a commitment to educating and safeguarding minors in the importance of accurate anatomical language, particularly relating to male and female sexual anatomy. Their soft sculptures and wearable works aim to counter euphemisms and misinformation that often obscure open conversations about sexual health. By making the body visible, nameable, and shareable, Murray invites deeper public understanding and personal agency.
Their methodologies combine anthropological analysis with wellbeing-focused practices, often incorporating collective storytelling as a form of transgressive, political resistance. Through socially engaged workshops and community-based art-making, they use creative process as a tool for healing, activism, and connection—centering lived experience as both material and method.
Aspiring to become a creative well-being practitioner, Murray’s work blurs the boundaries between art, education, and care. Whether in gallery settings or community spaces, their practice becomes a platform for critical engagement with gender, sexuality, and identity—rooted in the belief that art can be a catalyst for both personal and social change.
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