
My work grows from curiosity and questioning. Ideas emerge through observation, walking, travelling, drawing, making, and everyday experience. An overlooked object, a passing gesture, an unfamiliar place, or an unexpected encounter can all become the starting point for a work, gradually opening onto questions of perception, identity, memory, time, politics, and the ways we construct meaning. I have never been interested in accepting the world simply as it appears. Everyday life provides the material, but the work develops by testing assumptions, shifting context, and exploring the systems, behaviours, and beliefs that shape how we understand ourselves and the world around us. Rather than accepting these structures as fixed, the work looks at how small changes in context can reveal other ways of seeing, thinking, and understanding. Some works remain grounded in observation, while others move towards broader questions of psychology, philosophy, existence, and the nature of human experience. The work doesn’t seek certainty. It remains open to the possibility that every situation can be understood differently.