About
My work explores the emotional terrain of mental illness, death, and grief through storytelling and the unsettling yet delicate medium of dolls, illuminated by dynamic and often dramatic lighting. I use these figures not as playthings, but as fragile stand-ins for the human condition, silent, expressive, and unnervingly still. Each scene is carefully constructed to evoke vulnerability, isolation, or inner chaos, creating a visual narrative that speaks to the psychological weight of trauma and memory.
Dynamic lighting plays a central role in my practice, casting shadows that echo the complexity of the subjects I engage with. It reveals what hides beneath the surface, heightens tension, and imbues each piece with a cinematic intimacy. Through this interplay of light and form, I aim to make visible the invisible, to give form to anguish, to freeze fleeting emotions, and to create space for viewers to confront and reflect on the fragility of existence.