The Memory Project
Much of my work returns to the same trauma-tinged wellspring—a touchstone where I go to feel connected to the pain and joy that made me, inseparable from memory and identity. This work lingers at that threshold, where memory is both revelation and concealment.
Fragments merge into dreamlike compositions without resolution, as if revealing only glimpses of something almost recognizable, nearly a complete thought, before it disappears.
The work inhabits the space between remembrance and loss, where memory is a living thing, continually reconstructed rather than wholly recovered, where grief is about the loss of what could have been.