[2] Through a process of community engagement, her works build bright color into existing architectural landmarks, revealing local cultural values.
The first was entitled "Colouring the Invisible," at the School of Slavonic and East European Studies (SEESS).
[20][21] The public artwork consisted of ground murals that incorporated information gathered through community engagement of over a thousand participants.
[24] Vogl co-founded the London Brain Project with neuroscientists Louise Weiss, George Pitts and Michelle Downes, in 2013-2018.
[26][27] [28] In 2018, the Jewish Arts Collaborative recruited Vogl to create "Pathways to Freedom,"[29] a project that included a process of interviewing people in Boston about the ways that they felt free, as well as a graphical representation of these opinions.
Individual participants received custom buttons related to their answers,[30] which also influenced an artwork installed at the Soldiers and Sailors Monument in Boston Common from April 25 to May 14, 2018.
[37] Delaware Contemporary Art Center, Wilmington DL[38] Working with community and Children's Art Museum, [39] Wilmington DL Collaboration with artist Peter Hudson and the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
[48] Commissioned by Barts Health NHS Trust and Vital Arts for the Bereavement Suite at Whipps Cross University Hospital.
[49] Permanent glass sculpture commissioned by , Galliard Homes, O’Shea LTD, Westminster City Council.