about
My work traces the cycles between humans, buildings, and the land. I use sculpture, photography, drawing, and writing—shifting mediums and scale depending on the relationship being observed.
Even when we try to care for the planet—through sustainable choices or careful design—we are still changing the landscape. Every decision, no matter how well-intended, leaves a mark.
Much of my work revolves around death—not as an end, but as a natural part of ongoing transformation. Living things decay, structures collapse, materials erode—but through that, something new always forms. Living is dying, and dying is living.
I’m drawn to what breaks down, what holds on, and what patterns emerge over time. The land becomes a quiet record of these shifts—material, structural, and human.
I am Minneapolis-based artist and hold a Master of Architecture from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a Bachelor of Design in Architecture from the University of Minnesota. I work as a sustainability program manager while continuing her interdisciplinary art practice.
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