Laing listed
Vija Celmins as an inspiration for her own work, which included the following. • "A Charmed Life" is a drawing of a charm bracelet she had shared with her sister, and "Shadow Monkeys" is another fictional charm bracelet decorated with monkeys, in reference to works on the theory of evolution by
Richard Dawkins. "Shadow Monkeys" was a finalist for the 2006
Dobell Drawing Prize. • "Darwin's Girls" depicts a dead finch on top of a photograph of Laing and her sister as young girls. The finch is a reference to
Darwin's finches, Darwin's theory of
natural selection, and the inherited tendency for cancer that would eventually kill Laing. • "Fortune teller (it will all end in stars)" shows Laing's hands holding a
paper fortune teller decorated with the
Andromeda Galaxy, recalling childhood games with her sister and foretelling her own death. • "My Paper Ancestors" repeats the finch from "Darwin's Girls", with a paper dinosaur, a reference to "extinction on a larger scale". Similarly, "Last Migration" features origami
pteranodons, flying above images of Antarctica by
Frank Hurley. • "No Time to Waste" is a drawing of an origami star decorated with stars. • "Stargazer" depicts Eleanor Arroway, the main character of the 1997 film
Contact (as played by
Jodie Foster) with the universe spread behind her, on a crumpled and unfolded sheet of origami paper. Regarding the themes of astronomy and origami in her works, Laing stated "I found it more comforting to think of stars being born and dying and us being dragged into that cosmic sort of force ... the less significant I felt, the more happy I was. I can sit here and fold this star, but that's about all I can control. Time runs out." ==Exhibits and collections==