The death of my son in 2019 profoundly influenced my studio work, deepening my relationship with materiality. Burned marks, red-thread sutures, and layered surfaces became both acts of remembrance and reconstruction, embodying the resilience of transformation. Through layering, sewing and burning, the work becomes meditations on what remains, marking time in a way that feels both intimate and universal.

This work was made during the pandemic as a means to meditate and to process the past few years of my life—revealing various degrees of intimacy depending on the viewer. Further manipulating the works, I embellish the panel and paper with gold paint and ink, use palo santo incense to create marks with smoke, and also sew into the backgrounds with colored thread (often red). Thus, a number of the pieces become objects—almost artifacts—generating a visceral allure via their handmade qualities and sense of tactility.

Ultimately, I recognize the metamorphic potential within my recent body of work. Rooted in my own experiences, articulated through this lyrical, ambiguous language—they reflect the grief of the world. To me—they reveal a universal collective unconscious, influenced by stored memory, yet with the power to reshape histories and futures.

Previous
Previous

Explorations, 2023 -2024

Next
Next

The Natural World, 2023