[3] Since 1997 she has worked collaboratively with the collective Elizabeth Go (Victoria Morton, Sarah Tripp, Hayley Tompkins and Cathy Wilkes).
[1][5] Sue Tompkins uses the spoken and written word delivered in a deceptively simple and direct fashion.
Tompkins had an interesting way of coming to her unique style of work in art school:"I studied painting.
Much like her visual and sound-based works, her performances utilise the practice of language, ephemera and live situations.
Spin magazine described Tompkins' vocals as "nervously chirped evocative phrases" and credited her as the band's central attraction.