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?
There is a part of me in each figure, though they gesture toward a shared experience shaped by restraint, desire, and self-surveillance. The series situates personal struggle within the larger human condition, recognizing that what unfolds within one body does not remain contained there. If harm circulates beyond the individual, so too might repair. The photographs document this process rather than claim resolution. Repair is not a final state, but an ongoing  practice of engaging with change, responsibility, and the possibility of growth.
Back to Top