She has held exhibitions in Australia and the Republic of Ireland,[4][5] and in 2014 featured in Episode 2 of Hannah Gadsby's three-part series on Australian art, Oz.[6][7]
Work
Kneebone began as a ceramicist but expanded her art practice to include photomontage and other mixed media. Through her ceramics, photomontages and assemblages, she explores questions of cultural identity through her own family history,[8][9] as well as the impact of empire on the Australian landscape.[10][11] She has been described as combining “a hypnotic storyteller with the backbone of an archaeologist”.[12]
^Kneebone, Sue; Jones, Philip G (2010). Naturally disturbed. Adelaide, SA: SASA Gallery, University of South Australia. ISBN9780980726145. OCLC670029015.
^Dunne, Aidan (19 July 2016). "When Ballymun was all towering promise; Vulnerable bodies and the dispossessed also feature in three exhibitions at Galway International Arts Festival". The Irish Times. p. 10.