Frankie Fathers' collaborative installation Wigwam for a Goose's Bridle explores the emotional complexities of being a caregiver. The artist cares for her father, Michael, who has Alzheimer's disease and significant cognitive decline. Her installation directly responds to her father's deterioration, his obsession with stacking twigs and her guilt at being overseas. Michael, once meticulous about arranging high piles of twigs for his fire, now can't remember how to stack wood or at times, even where he sleeps or who his family are. Recreating her father's woodpile using found wood has become a way for the artist to articulate the frustration, and helplessness she experiences as a caregiver. During her residency, Frankie Fathers collaborated with Kaohsiung carers in two workshops to create large self-care fabric doors which form the opening to the installation, a portal to her father's deteriorating brain. She also asked carers to donate clothing worn by the family members they care for, which the artist knotted into a rope with her father's ties to write words that articulate her conflicted feelings. The installation is interactive and evolves daily mirroring the unpredictable nature of Alzheimer's and the artists' relationship with her father.