In my practice, I create sculptures, collages, and installations inspired by systems of health, education, and infrastructure. I take elements from these environments and shift them away from a purely neutral or functional role, into something more subjective by embedding myth and long-standing psychological beliefs.
I bring in a sense of pessimism and unease alongside materials and imagery that appear clean or reassuring, creating a contrast that reflects how spaces of care and learning are not experienced as entirely objective. By displacing and reworking life-sustaining systems, I make them examinable, sometimes incorporating pseudoscientific references to mirror how belief can form around structures that appear authoritative.
I am particularly interested in gaps in knowledge that occur through everyday experience, and how these absences can generate both misunderstanding and imagination. My artwork is driven by this space, where perception, belief, and uncertainty shape how systems are understood and experienced.
