A strong aversion to instability, chaos, and powerlessness drives my practice. I have often felt that my environment is beyond my control, and that any sense of order is temporary. Living in a foreign culture intensified that awareness, making the systems that organize and constrain daily life impossible to ignore.
This experience has deepened my interest in structure and order. I approach complex systems by reducing them to their essential elements, translating apparent chaos into something more methodical. I often build compositions from structures already embedded in the world, taking existing systems and reorganizing them to reflect my own needs and anxieties.
Although my work often focuses on the ways humans impose order on nature, it also functions as a way to process anxiety and the need for stability. Through structure, repetition, and material contrast, I explore the tension between order and entropy. The work is about the desire to create order while knowing that no structure is permanent.
