My practice is rooted in the physicality of materials and the tactile language of surfaces, where texture, form, and process become both medium and metaphor. 

I confront traditional boundaries between painting, sculpture, fiber art, installation, and performance, engaging with the sensorial and symbolic power of the body, memory, and materiality.

At the heart of my work lies an exploration of identity, trauma, otherness, and the rituals of transformation. I am drawn to the liminal—spaces where the spiritual and physical, carnal and cosmic, intimate and universal intersect. I treat the surface of a painting or a crumpled fabric as a skin-like membrane: layered, scarred, sacred. Through abstract patterns, imprints, repeated forms, and improvisation, I create compositions that echo ritual and reflect emotional and symbolic languages. 

My process is informed by experimentation, curiosity, and the self-regulation of emotion. 

Influenced by l’art informel, contemporary abstraction, surrealism, and spiritual practices drawn from magic realism and pagan cultures, I use bold colours, textures, and object-making to invoke transformation and self-reflection. Alchemical metaphors permeate the work: the transfiguration of materials mirrors the internal process of survival, identity formation, and renewal. Artificial flowers, altars, sculptural elements, and poetic language all converge to form immersive environments that are simultaneously personal and collective.

My works are often ritualistic in nature—personal acts that reflect a longing for connection, healing, and transcendence. They stem from stories, literature, the body, fashion photography, and a lived sense of otherness. Titles and poetic fragments offer entry points into these spaces, serving as both clues and veils. I envision each piece not as a static object but as an independent experience—an encounter with something unknowable, changing, and alive.

Ultimately, my practice is a response to the fragility and resilience of being—transforming absence into presence, trauma into sacredness, and the body into a site of myth, memory, and empowerment.