[1][2][3] Her work has been displayed at the Victoria and Albert Museum[4] and she was guest artist at the "Feminism and Gender" exhibition at the New Hall Art Collection.
In April 2015, Rachael House revisited her popular zine: Red Hanky Panky in a special ninth edition of the series.
With over two decades of distance from the last, eighth edition of Red Hanky Panky, House observes more mature themes surrounding queerness and feminism from an autobiographical perspective.
At "Apathy's a Drag" in May 2012 people were invited to create and float model boats on the lake in Southwark Park in commemoration of the Sex Pistols' river trip of 1977.
While graphic medicine can frequently refer to doctor’s room posters and pamphlets, Resistance Sustenance Protection is another iteration of House’s trailblazing in the comics world.
House's Resistance Sustenance Protection is a narrative comic book based on the mental health crisis that was born out of the COVID-19 pandemic.
House created a small wave in the zine community that allowed for multiple iterations of graphic medicine in a similarly recreational way.
Resistance Sustenance Protection also worked to destigmatize political propaganda around the pandemic; urging the readers to wash their hands and stay healthy both mentally and physically.
However, unsimilar from RHP, Resistance Sustenance Protection was published as a fully bound, hardcover book instead of a folded paper zine.
In exploring themes of queerness and mental health through a unique form of graphic medicine, the zine follows the narrator's slow, meandering days in isolation.
[19] The QZAP and Project MUSE found that House frequently uses metaphors to draw sufficient emotional connections between readers and their lived experiences.