Statement
My work arises from a deep curiosity about the invisible threads that shape both our inner and outer worlds. I explore themes of mysticism, human nature, feminine presence, and the ever-unfolding rhythms of existence. Lately, I’ve been especially drawn to the mystery of numbers—not as mathematical tools, but as living symbols that form the architecture of creation. I see numbers as a sacred language, a structure through which the soul explores itself. When guided with intention, can they bend time itself, unlock portals to elevated timelines, and reveal the hidden patterns of being?
In my work, I ask: What is it we’ve forgotten that the Earth still remembers? What if the forces that shape mountains, stir oceans, and birth stars are the same forces that move through our hearts? What if our pain, our joy, our longing—all arise from the same rhythm that pulses through the veins of nature?
Each painting is a portal—an invitation to feel what lies beneath the surface of reality. My piece Innocence emerges from this space, a visual echo of an ancient truth: that innocence is not weakness, but the raw and unfiltered presence of life itself. In its sister painting, The Bed of Becoming, I explore how the Earth’s beauty and suffering mirror our own—suggesting that the collective human psyche is not separate from the ecological soul of the planet, but an expression of it.
I work from a place where logic gives way to listening—where the unseen leads the hand. My art is not constructed; it is uncovered, as though it already exists in a hidden realm, waiting to be remembered. In this way, I follow the path of rivers, the language of wind, the stillness of stone.
Each piece becomes an offering, a moment of reawakening. It asks: Can you see the divine in decay? Can you hear the silence in a scream? Can you recognize yourself in the wildness of the world?
Through layered symbolism and intuitive process, my paintings seek to dissolve the illusion of separation. They invite the viewer into a space where cycles are sacred, change is holy, and every breath is part of a greater becoming.
Ultimately, my work is not about answers—it is about remembering. A deeper knowing that has no name. A knowing that perhaps… you’ve felt before.