
My practice investigates modes of coexistence in times marked by ecological and social crisis. I am interested in how encounters between human and more-than-human beings can generate sensitive and ethical shifts within contemporary landscapes of ruin. I approach living as a collective verb — to live with, to make with, to think with, to imagine with — proposing a displacement from anthropocentric perspectives toward expanded forms of listening and relationality.
I conceive my work as a relational ecosystem, articulating drawing, photography, video, and sound in compositions that emphasize interdependence and multiple temporalities. The forest operates not only as subject matter but as an epistemological and metaphorical framework — a way of thinking through networks, invisibility, and coexistence. To “reforest” thought becomes both a poetic and political gesture.
Within exhibition spaces, I develop process-based and participatory installations that invite collective construction. Rather than presenting fixed objects, I create relational fields
in which the work unfolds through encounter, shared presence, and transformation.
