Artist Statement
My work explores the psychological spaces around and between people — where individuals meet their environment, and where relationships form, fray, and evolve.
I began in abstract painting and gradually moved toward digital figurative work, drawn by the human form’s ability to speak more directly to themes of solitude, connection, and family dynamics.
Working digitally allows me to layer color and gesture with immediacy, while drawing on the compositional understanding I developed through years with oils, cold wax, and mixed media. Each piece captures a specific psychological moment — figures watching, waiting, longing, or lost in thought — revealing the inner landscapes within everyday gestures.
I’m currently developing a hybrid project combining visual work with writing to explore mother–daughter relationships. This reflects a broader interest in how we inherit and transform family narratives, and how the spaces between people contain essential truths about human experience.
With a background in cultural documentation and historical studies, I approach contemporary life with the same psychological attentiveness we often reserve for the past. I create work that functions both as individual artistic objects and as fragments of larger human stories.