Video
7 minutes and 21 seconds
When will it stop, is a found footage video that uses internet culture to explore itself, - its own addictive superficial nature, portrayals of “femininity” via trends/branding- and the worshipping relationship users have with the internet. The structure of this project is best described as a chaotic collage consisting of memes, “girl internet” and pornographic content to maintain viewers’ attention. Although the tone of this video is critical, there’s still an admiration for the internet and its ability to keep us continually entranced.
Video
8 minutes and 34 seconds
A collaborative video with Thane Kyu
#YAR, is a project that follows two influencers named Trashi and Bitchi through their rise to fame. Truthfully, they have no business or qualifications to be public figures but their love for the superficial and stupid transcends all. In the end, their
desire to own and be everything leads to a new age of existing.
Video
3 minutes and 36 seconds
This video questions and adapts the same sell
tactics of girly games by framing them as a
computer virus of GIFS and gameplay footage
as early internet references lay as an aesthetic
foundation.
Link: CUGINA (computer + vagina), 2024
Video
2 minutes and 54 seconds
CUGINA is an experimental video colliding
the gendered beauty standards and trends
experienced through social media against
the exploitative labor and environmental
conditions behind mobile phone
production.
Link: It's a fashein show, 2025
Video
4 minutes and 13 seconds
It’s a fashein show, focuses on the cheap & quick
industry of clothing that has developed to meet the
demands of trends and consumerism, known as fast
fashion. Images and videos (from Western media)
of labor, environmental and political impacts peak
through the models’ clothing and the background.
Link: DON'T LOOK, 2025
Video
1 minute and 27 seconds
In DON’T LOOK, I draw from my personal experiences of
being a kid on the internet searching up people kissing, to
current-day me conflicted by the feeling of not being “gay
enough” due to my attraction to men. In the beginning of
the video, I focus on the male gaze, and the sexualization
of lesbian relationships. An additional layer of this piece is
the internet’s relationship with queer identity and community.
From the infamous “How gay are you?” quiz to the erratic
pop algorithm of gay culture. I also wanted to present the
irony and humor of Donald Trump saying what could be
interpreted as homoerotic statements, as he threatens the
LGBTQ+ community on the daily to polarize us.