Practices in Repair approaches healing as ritual and inquiry. Through casting, burning, soft sculpture, and photographic documentation, I use the body as both a subject and a site where harm and care coexist. At its core, the work asks: How does one heal when they are both the victim and the perpetrator?
The body appears unstable throughout the series: soft forms spill beyond their boundaries, figures are concealed beneath sheets, and tightly cropped images fragment the body into unfamiliar shapes. These distortions gesture towards shared experiences shaped by restraint, desire, and self-surveillance. Practices in Repair situates personal struggle within a broader human condition, recognizing healing as an ongoing practice rather than a final state.