About
My practice has developed through a long engagement with questions around identity, health, policy and place, and how these systems shape everyday life. Earlier projects focused on socially engaged and participatory work, creating spaces for dialogue and collective reflection around issues such as housing, class and stigma. Working closely with participants, I explored how lived experiences intersect with the structures that claim to support us.
In recent years my practice has shifted toward a quieter studio-based approach. Through mixed media assemblage I bring together drawing, paint, text, collage and textile elements to create layered works on paper. These works often draw on fragments of research, personal archives and materials gathered through walking, allowing ideas to emerge slowly through the act of making.
Across both phases of my practice I remain interested in how personal narratives sit within wider social systems. Assemblage has become a way of holding those fragments together — allowing memory, lived experience and the traces of everyday life to surface through process rather than resolution.
