I thread together fragments of personal trauma and domestic memories, inviting viewers to explore the interplay between home and identity, and creating a dialogue about loss and longing. My current interests lie in the processes involved in both the construction and the deconstruction of memories. Within the intimate confines of the home, memories take shape against the backdrop of everyday life.

Drawing upon my own struggles with dissociative amnesia, I seek to convey the profound sense of fragmentation and disintegration that accompanies the experience of memory loss. I engage in a tedious and slow process of unraveling threads from found fabrics, metaphorically symbolizing the unraveling of one’s identity. Not as a quick action, but rather as a slow, methodical erosion. Each removed strand serves as a reminder of the fragments of self that are lost.