practice and path
I am an artist, writer, dialogue facilitator, and cultural strategist who collaborates with individuals, groups, and leaders explore the cultural myths and invisible assumptions shaping how they think, relate, decide,
or lead.
My interdisciplinary practice spans digital art, performance, mixed media, and essays on art and culture. I attended the Santa Monica College of Design, Art, and Architecture, founded by MacArthur Fellow, Joan Abrahamson. My artwork has been exhibited in museums and galleries across Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle.
For more than a decade, I have facilitated dialogues on humanity in spaces including the Portland Art Museum, The New School in New York City, and a range of public, private, and gallery settings. Over the past three years, I have collaborated with leaders of cultural and philanthropic organizations to advance community impact.
My artwork has been exhibited in museums and galleries across Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle.
you are more than categories. we all are.
Human beings are far more complex, contradictory, and interconnected than the systems, labels, and rigid absolutes that increasingly define modern life.
Much of human misunderstanding comes from the stories we inherit and shaped by family, society, history, ideology, fear, and belonging.
Rooted in real-life experience, my collaborations create space to question and reframe those narratives so as to create unique perspectives on what it means to be human.
why this work matters
At the center of my work is a simple yet transformative set of questions:
Who holds the authority to define who we are? How do we reclaim our humanity from the categories that seek to define it?
Through art, radical conversation, immersive experiences, and cultural inquiry, I help participants reexamine identity, history, and belonging.
The goal is not to arrive at definitive answers, but to challenge and expand what is possible when we look beyond our belief systems.
In engaging with these questions, we reconnect with the humanity that exists beyond the categories that separate us — opportunities for personal and collective flourishing.
You’ll carry these experiences forward, bringing greater connection and humanity into your life, work, and relationships.