ABSTRACT
“The Mermaid’s Curse” is a creative and critical experiment which draws on both the “combinational” approach
to creativity described by Boden (2010: 32) and the idea of the author as “bricoleur-as-bowerbird” (Webb &
Brien 2010: 199). Beginning in early May 2020, the author of “The Mermaid’s Curse” used Instagram as the
primary “synaptic technology” (Harper 2015: 7) to share their work-in-progress, which combines short prose
pieces (fiction and creative nonfiction) with images of their textile and digital art. The inclusion of visual art – a
recently rediscovered part of the author’s creative practice - speaks to Barnard’s proposition that “multimodal
practice” is a means to reclaim creativity that has been forgotten or suppressed (2019: 72). Multimodal writing
is an opportunity to reach back and draw in previous practice which is then applied in new contexts, and a
means of embracing the affordances and facing the challenges presented by digital platforms. This article is a
multimodal account of a multimodal project. It combines analysis, reflection, creative writing and visual art as
a means of examining multimodal practice in action. It is hoped that a close focus on a project that energised
one practitioner’s approach may be helpful for other practitioners, serving as an encouragement to experiment
with “code-switching” between different form or genres of creative expression within one overarching creative
project.
Keywords: multimodal; flash fiction; creative nonfiction; visual art; textile art; digital art; Instagram; creative exposition