
Miranda Hampson — Awakened (2025) — Acrylic on Cotton Canvas — 76 cm x 76 cm
Miranda Hampson — Awakened (2025) — Acrylic on Cotton Canvas — 76 cm x 76 cm — Unframed
Custom Framing Quotes Will Be Sought Upon Request.
Miranda Hampson — Awakened (2025) — Acrylic on Cotton Canvas — 76 cm x 76 cm
Miranda Hampson — Awakened (2025) — Acrylic on Cotton Canvas — 76 cm x 76 cm — Unframed
Custom Framing Quotes Will Be Sought Upon Request.
This is an original work by Miranda Hampson.
View other works in this collection here.
Artist CV is available on request.
Authenticity certificate is provided.
This artwork is in Noosaville, on he Sunshine Coast, Queensland.
Note: This work is currently not framed, and custom framing quotes will be sought upon request.
Please do get in touch if you have any questions or would like to view additional images / video of this work - we would be delighted to assist!
Miranda Hampson is an Anaiwan First Nations artist and is recognised as part of the Aboriginal community at Uralla. She is practicing on Dharawal Country.
Hampson’s work honours First Nations connections to Country, drawing on her heritage and her background in cultural heritage management. Her practice is grounded in the shared experience of kin, Country and place whilst suggesting it as a means to heal and strengthen the bonds between people, land and culture. Hampson’s works explore a visual language that is both personal and cultural. Each piece is a result of a ritual, where mindful mark making builds upon itself, creating richly layered surfaces that pulse with depth and intensity.
“These works draw from the intricate practice of First Nations net-making and fishing traditions. The net is more than a tool—it is a symbol of connection. Each strand represents lineage, memory, and care: woven by hand, passed through generations, and cast into the living waters of Country. In these works, I reimagine the fishing net not only as an object of survival but as a visual language — one that speaks of kinship, resilience, and sustainable practice. The fluid lines and layered textures in these works evoke both the physical presence of the net and the invisible threads that bind community to land, sea, and sky. The spaces between the strands are just as important—they hold breath, movement, and the sacred unknown. This collection is a tribute to the women who fished not for profit, but for balance — those who read the tides, honoured the seasons, and only ever took what was needed." - Miranda Hampson