Artist Statement
My work explores how memory feels when it changes, fades, or refuses to stay still. I am interested in how time, trauma, and emotion reshape what we think we know. Many of my ideas come from personal and family experiences that have blurred or become hard to hold onto.
I work with materials that show both strength and fragility; wire, spray foam, plaster, fabric, and found objects. Their textures help me tell the story of how memory can be rough, layered, or tender. Each piece starts as a reaction to a feeling or a thought that I cannot put into words.
When I build or shape a piece, I think about what it means to repair, to rebuild, or to let go. The process is often slow and physical. I move between control and release, trying to make sense of what has been carried over time.
My installations ask viewers to slow down and pay attention to small details, the way a surface cracks, bends, or catches light. Through this work, I want to show how memory continues to live, even when it changes form.