Sculptures

My work considers the house not only as architecture, but as a container of lived experience, a place where the outside world gathers and where personal histories are continuously shaped.

The houses we once lived in never fully leave us. My sculptures explore memory, belonging, and the quiet relationship between domestic spaces and the wider world. Through sculpture, I reflect on the houses we once lived in and the way they continue to shape our sense of belonging and identity.


My sculptures explore the idea of “house in the world and world in a house”, the intimate relationship between our personal spaces and the wider world around us. A house is never separate from its environment. Every wall, object, texture, and material carries traces of elsewhere: histories, memory, weather, movement, and human presence.

I am interested in how houses hold emotional residue. The homes we once lived in continue to exist within us long after we leave them. Certain rooms, corners, light through windows, worn surfaces, smell of cake, or the feeling of entering a doorway remain embedded in memory. Through sculpture, I try to give form to these recollections and the invisible connections between shelter, belonging, and identity.

My work considers the house not only as architecture, but as a container of lived experience, a place where the outside world gathers and where personal histories are continuously shaped.