I began creating art at the age of eleven, experimenting with whatever ideas, materials, or forms felt right for the moment. My process has always been intuitive; piecing elements together like a puzzle to reflect the mood or tone of the day. I don’t believe a piece needs to be perfect; what matters is the conversation it sparks. I want my work to speak for itself and invite viewers to question, reflect, or engage in dialogue.
I work primarily in digital and print media, often incorporating mixed‑media elements. My practice is deeply rooted in themes of feminism, nature, self‑image, and the pressures placed on women’s bodies. Much of my work explores the tension between how women are perceived and how they feel internally; sometimes through the metaphor of a doll figure breaking out of the box she was placed in.
Art, for me, is an outlet for the emotional weight of these experiences. It allows me to release what sits in the mind and body rather than hold it in. Each piece becomes a way to process how women are treated, what they are expected to be, and how they can reclaim their own narratives. My focus is not only on the craft itself but on the steps, layers, and decisions that allow a piece to open up a larger discussion.