[2] Loft's arts-based research projects, collaborations and theatrical co-creations with other artists use voice, instrumentation and wearable sculpture to explore Haudenosaunee history and produce community-engaged spectacles.
"[4] Her installation and video work with the Jumblies Theater incorporated objects and materials, including kettles, hats, rum and flannel cloth that the British gave to the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation people in the Toronto Purchase to buy their ancestral lands.
[7][8] The Canadian Centre for Architecture invited Loft as the inaugural Research Fellow for Indigenous researchers, to develop work on land restitution in Tiohtià:ke/Mooniyang/Montréal, resulting in an installation, Visibly Iroquoian, dealing with Indigenous presence, relationality and place-making.
[12] She also directs the Talking Treaties Initiative of the Jumblies Theatre, where she is also the associate artistic director.
[13] In 2021–2022, Loft received a biennial fellowship from Living Lands in partnership with the Canadian Centre for Architecture.