I am a re-emerging interdisciplinary artist working across drawing, film, poetry-film performance, voice and music. I paused my artistic practice to raise a family and train and work as an art psychotherapist. Returning to making, I bring two decades of clinical experience that now deeply informs my artistic enquiry, which focuses on care, attachment, residue and the intergenerational and relational. 

I am currently developing a long-form poetry film exploring intergenerational intimacies in adult relationships. The work proposes that age, like gender, functions as an assigned social structure — naturalised, regulated and moralised rather than purely biological. Through spoken text, moving image and performance, the film examines how desire, care, power and temporality are socially organised and policed.

This project builds on my earlier film Pallinopsia, which explored the psychological after-images therapists carry between sessions using material drawn from my personal camera roll. As with my mushroom drawings, where spores act as metaphors for dispersal, trace and regeneration, the new work considers how intimacy moves across time, how attachments linger, and how bodies carry social inscription.