To Cut The Evil  By The Root

Gelatin Silver Prints
2020-2025
Photography  

Upcoming publication



This work traces the intergenerational bond between three women—a grandmother, mother, and daughter—within the symbolic space of the home. Here, caregiving becomes ritual, and memory fragments into layers of myth, emotion, and inheritance.

To Cut the Evil by the Root is a meditation on care, memory, and the unseen threads that tie generations of women together. It invites viewers into a liminal realm where the mystical and the everyday coexist, and where the act of caregiving becomes a quiet form of transformation and release.

Will You Tell It For Me? 

One channel video projected on newsprint paper, 22’min loop 
2024

Moving Image



How do you put something into words when there’s nothing left to say—only to feel?
"How much of what we remember truly belongs to us?"

I’m asking my friends to lend me their voices. I’m capturing their words and expressions. The idea is simple: their voices will be stitched together to form something whole—a connection that holds them, you, and me.

Recipe for a Pocket, install view, 2024
Recipe for a Pocket, install view, 2024
Recipe for a Pocket, install view, 2024
Recipe for a Pocket, install view, 2024
Recipe for a Pocket, install view, 2024
Recipe for a Pocket, install view, 2024
Reap What You Sow

Gelatin Silver Prints
2024

Photography 




Now You See Me

One channel video  30’min 
2023

Moving Image

Documentary

Now You See Me is a tender, time-worn letter to a grandmother slowly disappearing. Filmed over four  years entirely within the confines of a shared home, it lingers on the quiet rhythms of daily life - the gestures, silences, and routines that shape a world gradually slipping from memory.

As dementia unspools the threads of recognition and language, the camera holds close to what remains: the texture of skin, the weight of a pause, the light shifting across a room. Through repetition and intimate observation, the filmmaker,  both caregiver and grandchild, captures the slow fading of a loved one, and the quiet transformation of their own inner world.

Time bends and blurs, moments return and vanish. In holding space for what can no longer be recalled, Now You See Me becomes an act of presence,  a portrait of love traced in the ordinary, and a way of remembering when memory itself begins to fail.


“Group K”

Nearest Truth Editions
July 2024
Publication

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Dead Calm 

Gelatin Silver Prints
50x50cm
2017

Photography