How it comes to life
How it comes to life
From Earth to Presence
Every sculpture begins long before clay touches my hands.
It starts with observing the landscape—its rhythms, its textures, and the quiet traces left behind by people over generations. Stacked stones, weathered walls, forgotten markers and natural formations all become part of an ongoing visual language that informs my work.
Back in the studio, these observations are translated into sculptural forms.
The Dialogue Between Organic and Geometry
My work exists in the space where organic movement meets geometric order.
Soft curves interact with architectural lines.
Irregular textures meet carefully balanced compositions.
This tension creates sculptures that feel both ancient and contemporary, familiar and unexpected.
Creating Places of Belonging
The process doesn’t end when a sculpture leaves the studio.
It continues when the work finds its place in a home, gallery or architectural space.
Only then does it become what it was always intended to be:
A contemporary marker.
An object that creates presence.
A place that feels like home.
Time as a Material
Clay teaches patience.
Every sculpture passes through weeks of drying, refining and firing. Nothing can be rushed.
The material records every touch, every decision and every moment in the making process.
Rather than hiding these traces, I allow them to remain visible. They become part of the story each piece carries.
