dc.description.abstract | This article generates new understandings of dementia through feminist posthumanist and performative engagements with co-creative artmaking practices during a six-month study in a residential care home in Norway.
Dementia emerges within multisensorial entanglements of more-than-human materials in three different artmaking sessions, which first materialized in the form of collective photographs and vignettes and culminated in a
final exhibition, Gleaming Moments, in the care home. Drawing on these photographs, vignettes, and the author's
engagement as a research artist in the sessions, this analysis examined how dementia was enacted as a spark of
inspiration, felted warm seat pads, and a friendly more-than-human touch, that is, a touch of human and
nonhuman art materials. These findings suggest new ontologies of dementia within multisensorial artmaking
practices, in which dementia functions as a material for co-creative artmaking rather than a disease. These
findings disrupt dominant biomedical ontologies of Alzheimer's disease and other dementias, as well as humanist
person-centered practices in dementia care, which have concretized an individual, rather than relational, focus
on dementia. In contrast, this study explores dementia as a phenomenon within the entanglements of human and
nonhuman intra-active agencies. By highlighting the significance of these agencies (i.e., sponge holder-painting,
wool-felting, choir-singing, chick-making) for different worlds-making with dementia, this study provides an
entry point for imagining feminist posthumanist caring. Thus, dementia becomes a matter in life that is not to be
managed and defeated to achieve successful aging, but to be interrogated and embraced. | en_US |