Artist Statement
My work examines the body as a site of transformation rather than representation. Drawing from familiar anatomical and sexual imagery, I separate these forms from their expected function and desire, allowing them to exist as autonomous structures. By abstracting and recontextualizing what is culturally recognizable, I challenge how bodies are read, consumed, and controlled.
Through distortion, repetition, and material weight, my sculptures explore states of vulnerability and exposure moments where the body appears unsettled, unfinished, or altered by forces beyond its control. These forms are not meant to invite interaction, but to confront the viewer with the tension between recognition and discomfort. I am interested in how meaning shifts when the body is no longer aligned with its intended purpose, and how transformation can reveal both fragility and resilience.
My practice is driven by narratives of mutation, instability, and becoming, where familiar forms are pushed to the edge of legibility. By allowing uncertainty to remain unresolved, I ask viewers to consider the body not as an object for consumption, but as a changing, unstable presence shaped by pressure, exposure, and time.