
"Healing" from the series "Once upon a Time"
Recent Artworks

"landscape of happy" from the series "Once upon a Time"

"Most people are other people, their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives a mimicry, their passions a quotation."
- Oscar Wilde
Thoughts About My Art Work
Art is a world where no language barriers exist.
I see myself as a story teller. My art creations are non-verbal poems about loneliness, doubt, society, existence and identity. Experimenting, taking risks, breaking rules, seeing things in a new way, are fuel for my creativity.
I enjoy the freedom of creating art for the sole purpose of unlocking discussions and dialogues. I push the viewer to think about the complications of being. I often expose myself by participating in my art compositions. Beautiful is boring and I embrace the idea that imperfection is more interesting. I chose the media depending on the message and the reaction I want to create. Collages, photography, photomontages or mixed media but I also enjoy working with installation and performance.
For my collages, I piece together magazine cutouts with painted surfaces, found materials and photographs. I play with proportions and space to make the viewer's senses more alert.
As I take materials out of their original context and repurpose images, I have them mirror my personal world of emotions, thoughts, memories, and dreams.
While collecting, editing, and assembling pieces to build a story, improvisation is always an important part of the procedure, and the final outcome is often a surprise.
I find inspiration in poetry and philosophy, as well as in my experiences as a global nomad while traveling the world. My art questions the world we have created but it is also a brutal and honest declaration of love to life. I share my intimate analyzation of the society we live in, what we have become, and what we can be, always with a specific eye on women’s experience.
I welcome the viewer of my creations to read the world between the lines and start their own self exploring.
I see myself as a story teller. My art creations are non-verbal poems about loneliness, doubt, society, existence and identity. Experimenting, taking risks, breaking rules, seeing things in a new way, are fuel for my creativity.
I enjoy the freedom of creating art for the sole purpose of unlocking discussions and dialogues. I push the viewer to think about the complications of being. I often expose myself by participating in my art compositions. Beautiful is boring and I embrace the idea that imperfection is more interesting. I chose the media depending on the message and the reaction I want to create. Collages, photography, photomontages or mixed media but I also enjoy working with installation and performance.
For my collages, I piece together magazine cutouts with painted surfaces, found materials and photographs. I play with proportions and space to make the viewer's senses more alert.
As I take materials out of their original context and repurpose images, I have them mirror my personal world of emotions, thoughts, memories, and dreams.
While collecting, editing, and assembling pieces to build a story, improvisation is always an important part of the procedure, and the final outcome is often a surprise.
I find inspiration in poetry and philosophy, as well as in my experiences as a global nomad while traveling the world. My art questions the world we have created but it is also a brutal and honest declaration of love to life. I share my intimate analyzation of the society we live in, what we have become, and what we can be, always with a specific eye on women’s experience.
I welcome the viewer of my creations to read the world between the lines and start their own self exploring.

Life itself is a performance, a play where we metamorphose, dress up and perform...
"He allowed himself to be swayed by his conviction that human beings are not born once and for all on the day their mothers give birth to them, but that life obliges them over and over again to give birth to them selves."
- Gabriel Garcia Marques
(Love in the time of cholera)
