Skip to content

Fortune cookies, MIQ Paper Bag Craft

Shared by
Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

These paper fortune cookies were made by Kristin Koch and are one of the activities in the MIQ Paper Bag Craft Class she created. During her stay at an MIQ (managed isolation and quarantine) facility in Auckland in February-March 2021, Kristin used her experience as an occupational therapist to develop a 14-day craft class that would help others combat isolation and boredom, while making functional crafts in the process. Managed Isolation and Quarantine MIQ was a key part of New Zealand’s border control strategy for managing the Covid-19 outbreak. From April 2020 to March 2022 international arrivals to New Zealand had to stay in a managed isolation facility, initially for 14 days and then, from February 2022, for 7 days. The government contracted hotels to use as MIQ facilities, and at their height these facilities could accommodate 12,600 people every 28 days. In all, nearly 230,000 people returned to New Zealand through an MIQ facility. Kristin Koch Kristin and her husband travelled to the United States in February 2020 so that Kristin could have a year at home. They arrived right before Covid-19 started spreading widely. Throughout the year Kristin had various roles in the health sector, including working in rehabilitation, being part of a Covid-19 emergency management team, creating a backup Covid-19 hospital, and providing information on Covid-19 and vaccines. In July 2020 Kristin contracted Covid-19 while working in a hospital, and it took her many months to recover. MIQ Paper Bag Craft Class In February 2021 the couple returned to New Zealand to work in healthcare. They were required to spend two weeks in managed isolation so Kristin joined the Hotel Quarantine New Zealand Facebook group, which as of August 2021 had more than 15,000 members. She saw how many people in MIQ were bored and wanted to help them find something meaningful to do with their time. For fourteen days from February 25 2021, she posted instructions for a new craft to the Facebook group each day, making use of the paper bags that meals were delivered in. The crafts were designed to brighten up the hotel room or make it a little more functional. Kristen estimates that about 500 people participated in the MIQ Paper Bag Craft class in some way – 300 people followed her posts while she was in managed isolation and another 200 people discovered the posts later and created the crafts. More than 100 people have messaged her directly asking for the PDF instructions, and Kristin has heard that some MIQ wellness teams give out printed copies. Fellow crafters have posted images of their finished creations online, and one person even created a TikTok video showing the crafts she made using Kristin’s instructions. Community in Isolation Throughout the Covid-19 pandemic people found various ways of connecting across quarantine barriers while remaining physically distant – from putting pictures and teddy bears in windows, to creating online communities and sharing ideas. Kristin’s Craft Class represents the widespread phenomenon of people engaging in creative acts to help find meaning during the Covid-19 crisis, and demonstrates how 'engaging in creativity can be used as a shield against the negative consequences' of the pandemic (Kapoor & Kaufman 2020, 2). References Deguara, Brittney. 202. From day 0 to day 14: What it's like inside a Covid-19 managed isolation facility. Stuff. https://www.stuff.co.nz/national/health/coronavirus/124648423/from-day-0-to-day-14-what-its-like-inside-a-covid19-managed-isolation-facility Kapoor, Hansika & James C. Kaufman. 2020. Meaning-Making Through Creativity During COVID-19. Frontiers in Psychology, Vol 11. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7775492/ Koch, Kristin. 2021. Unpublished notes provided to curator, 28 July and 6 August. Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, [2022]. MIQ timeline. About MIQ. https://www.mbie.govt.nz/immigration-and-tourism/isolation-and-quarantine/managed-isolation-and-quarantine/about-miq/miq-timeline/Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment, 2022. Briefing for the Incoming Minister for Covid-19 Response: Managed Isolation and Quarantine (MIQ). https://www.beehive.govt.nz/sites/default/files/2022-08/BIM%20Hon%20Ayesha%20Verrall%20-%20COVID-19%20Response%20-%20Managed%20Isolat ion%20%26%20Quarantine.pdf (PDF) 7 November 2022

Ngā whakamārama -
Details

  • Title

    Fortune cookies, MIQ Paper Bag Craft

  • Maker

    Kristin Koch

  • Date made

    2021

  • Subject

    Handicraft, paper, origami (visual works), COVID-19 (Disease), public health, Auckland

  • Rights

    All Rights Reserved

  • View source record for this item

    https://collections.tepapa.govt.nz/object/2004987

Kei hea tēnei taonga? -
Where is this item held?

  • Additional information including high resolution images may be available.

  • Location

    Cable Street, Wellington

Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

Whare taonga | Organisation

Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa

Ngā here ki runga i ngā whakaahua o tēnei taonga? -
What can you do with images of this item?

  • You must check with Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa to confirm terms of use and any attribution requirements, but this is our understanding:

  • Use for private study, research, criticism, review, or education

    NZ Copyright law allows for the use of copyrighted works in specific circumstances. Consider what you can do under copyright law.

  • No sharing

    You can't share this image without futher permission.

  • No modifying

    You can't modify, remix or add to this image without further permission.

  • No commercial use

    You can't use this image to make money.

  • Text adapted with permission from Te Papa and Digital NZ

Tāpirihia he kōrero anō -
Improve this record

  • Can you help us? Share names, details and stories to help enrich the collection.

    Contact contributor