The personal is my foundation—my conceptual practice emerges from the interplay between memory, identity, and place. I examine my relationship with Australia, having been born to immigrant parents, navigating the complexities of belonging, displacement, dual heritage, and living on land that was never ceded. Through my work, I explore the many roles I inhabit—mother, wife, lover—each offering a lens through which I reflect on identity, experience, and connection.
Reflection is constant and never-ending, shaping the overarching themes within my work. In seeking to understand myself, I uncover pathways to understanding others—their feelings, memories, and shared experiences. My process is immersive and intuitive: it often begins with research that examines historical, environmental, and cultural narratives. I engage in conversations with family and friends, capturing fragments of intimacy through video and photography. These moments become vessels for storytelling, layered with emotion and enquiry.
My art practice is a dialogue—between past and present, self and other, silence and sound. It is an act of listening, remembering, and reimagining—a way to respect complexity and cultivate connection.