I have a strong interest in women's narratives—specifically, how their inner thoughts, perceptions, sorrows, and joys are influenced by their cultural and family backgrounds, and how these feelings are represented through art. I am a visual anthropologist and a multidisciplinary artist whose work explores memory, identity, and the feminine experience through drawing, installation, photography, film, and performance. Inspired by personal stories, collective archives, and fragments of memory, I aim to reveal elements that are blocked, erased, hidden, or unspoken, reconnecting with these issues through embodied gestures and narrative forms.
My creative process is guided by the materials I use and informed by thorough research. I intertwine archival fragments, oral histories, embodied performance, and cinematic sequences into installations and visual media that excavate traces of feeling and belonging. My art serves as a continuous exploration of identity, honoring imperfection, narrative complexity, and intergenerational connection. It exists in a state of evolution while remaining recognizable as a personal archive of living memory.