J. Morgan Puett

[11] Her work uses conceptual tools including research-based methods in history, biology, new economies, design, craft and collaboration.

Morgan's early work forged new territory by intervening into the fashion system with a series of storefront installations and clothing/dwelling/event projects in Manhattan, New York in the 1980s and 90s,[12] then produced a long series of research installations on the histories of the needle trade systems in museums and festivals around the world.

In 2003, as part of the exhibition RN: The Past, Present, and Future of the Nurses' Uniform at The Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia.

[22] With Mark Dion, she is a founder of The Mildred's Lane Project, an experimental artist's residency program.

Karen Archey, writing in Art in America, described Mildred's Lane as an "ongoing experiment in pedagogy, a social space, a site for artistic and architectural intervention, a residency program, and home to Puett..."[25] Located on a 96-acre farm in rural Berlin Township Pennsylvania, the residency focuses on social and political practice in the arts.