STATEMENT

My research activates relational processes aimed at understanding and challenging human hierarchies. My practice is rooted in in situ approaches and unfolds through participatory observation, often in public spaces. It is performative in nature: it begins by placing myself within a situation to provoke a shift—whether in posture, perception, relationships, or function.

Currently, I focus on interspecies interdependence within agricultural contexts and on monuments as sites of counter-narratives. The outcomes of these processes take the form of photographs, installations, drawings, videos, books or curatorial projects.