Miranda Hill

Miranda is an independent curator, writer and researcher based between the UK and Germany. She has worked on a variety of projects at varying scales that have involved hosting, writing, researching, curating, building, and designing. 

My work revolves around the concept of postnature and explores how approaches to the study of human-altered  environments can inform contemporary projects to deepen
our understanding of life’s interconnectedness. I do this  through practices that nurture care, curiosity, encounters, and collective sharing.

I am interested in the mediation and construction of   publics - particularly peripheral and fluid environments where knowledge and space are collectively and continually
redefined. I have worked with locally sourced materials such as earth and clay on building-based projects, developed performance programmes addressing wetland
conservation, and co-curated exhibitions focused on water and saltmarsh ecosystems. 

Miranda is Associate Curator at Art Gene where her work sits across site-specific installations, public art, exhibitions, and events with a focus on sustainability, heritage, place,
and community. She has worked with artists across commercial, public and independent sectors to help realise their ideas.  She studied History of Art at the University of  Manchester and completed her Masters in Curating Contemporary Art at the Royal College of Art.

For enquiries and collaborations please get in touch:

mirandaflorencehill@outlook.com
+44 7907099600

CV / Portfolio upon request
Instagram




2025/26
Remember Nature: Intra-actions

Deluge exhibition
Moonscreen

2024
Transitional Botijos
Narcissus Dreams
Lost  Shops

2022/2023

Mud Club

Ecologies of Care: Rethinking Wetlands
Pidgin, Royal College of Art



































Deluge
2025

Team: Art Gene, Art Walk Projects
Artists: Linde Ex, Dana Olarscu, Oscar van Heek
Writing commissioned from Tom Jeffreys 



Lorem Ipsum Dolor-Sit Amet
Vivamus sed condimentum leo
Publisher: Querido
Design: Quisque Malesuada

Deluge was the culmination of a three-year project connecting three ecologically vital saltmarshes: Barrow-in-Furness (UK), East Lothian (Scotland), and Schiermonikoog in the Wadden Sea (Netherlands). These tidal wetlands play a crucial role in marine ecosystems and carbon sequestration.

Since 2022, each artist took time to explore and research their local saltmarsh ecosystem before travelling to the other two locations to make connections across the three sites. This process of exchange and comparison informed a body of work developed over the course of the project, alongside a programme of public walks and workshops exploring landscape form, drawing, and alternative modes of outdoor communication.

The exhibition, held at Art Gene in February 2025, marked the project’s conclusion. I co-curated the exhibition with Art Gene and wrote the interpretive texts. Deluge highlighted the ecological and cultural significance of saltmarshes as fragile, often overlooked habitats. The exhibition reflected on how these transitional zones between land and sea might be better valued, engaged with, and cared for.


 Review by Simon Sylvester, Corridor8 here 








© Copyright Miranda Florence Hill 2026