Ecological Installations
Some of these works live directly within the landscape, some shift with time. Most are subtle gestures made with materials gathered from the land. My process is rooted in ancestral knowledge and sustainable art practices, exploring relationships with plants, leaves, flowers, and soils that I feel called to work with. Each installation is both a research based exploration and a ritual practice intended to highlight the cultural significance embedded in natural dye and pigment traditions. These outdoor installations invite viewers to pause, reflect, and engage with the natural world in situ, emphasizing reciprocity, care, and belonging within the ecosystem.
Gallery Installations
In gallery spaces, these naturally dyed fibers and ephemeral materials are translated into vibrant, immersive, spatial compositions. My process remains rooted in ancestral knowledge and sustainable art practices, exploring relationships with the same plants, flowers, and soils that inspire my outdoor work. Each gallery installation continues as a research based exploration and ritual practice. By translating these ecological gestures into a gallery context, the works invite viewers to engage with color, form, harmony, and presence, offering a dialogue between interior and exterior, land, material and spirit.

Installation About
I create installation work that centers belonging, reciprocity, and care for our environment. My process is rooted in ancestral knowledge and sustainable art practices, exploring relationships with plants, leaves, flowers, and soils that I feel called to work with.
Across both landscape and gallery settings, my work carries one intention: to honor reciprocal relationships with the living world, guided by ancestral ways of making and remembering.
