I use photography and textiles to explore the relationship between chronic illness and neurodivergence, exploring how complex lived experiences affect time, perception, and memory.
I work with images of childhood objects, personal archives, and fragments of domestic life - transforming them through repetitive digital and analogue processes.
My process is both exploratory and soothing—part autobiography, part therapy. I rely on movement, touch, and bodily intuition, reflecting the embodied nature of trauma, illness, and care.