ARTIST STATEMENT
I work with textiles as a way to explore memory, material culture, and ancestral knowledge. For me, weaving, dyeing, and making are not just techniques, they are languages that carry histories, identities, and relationships between people and land. Rooted in hands-on learning, I immerse myself in the places where traditions originate, engaging directly with the materials, environments, and communities that sustain them.
Raised between cultures and countries, I see borders as fluid. Thanks to my mother’s work in aviation, I’ve been traveling my whole life. This constant movement shaped my way of seeing: I’ve never felt tied to one place, but instead developed a deep sensitivity to cultural diversity and nuance. My mother, a fashion designer passionate about traditional textiles, and my father, a photographer, both profoundly influenced my path. From an early age, I was surrounded by fabric, cameras, and stories, seeds that continue to grow in my work today.
Photography is an essential part of my process. It allows me to slow down, to notice what is often overlooked, and to create space for others’ stories to emerge. I don’t use it as a passive documentation tool, but as a form of presence, focusing on gestures, textures, and rhythms that reveal deeper narratives.
My research sits at the intersection of art, design, and anthropology. I am not an observer from the outside, but a learner, guided by curiosity, care, and respect. For me, textile traditions are not relics of the past, but active, adaptable practices that continue to hold meaning in the present.
In a world of increasing standardization and disconnection, I seek out the fragile, the handmade, the land-based, and the intimate, where meaning is spun, dyed, and woven into every thread.