


I am an art history graduate, guided by a deep-rooted commitment to education that has shaped my professional journey since the beginning. My engagement with art history began in 2020 at the Open University, as part of a second academic journey, prompted by a simple question: how do we understand what we see? That question continues to guide my work.
This space is where I continue to explore art as a living language, one that speaks of emotion, but also of power, identity, memory, and change. Through close looking, reflection, and research, I am interested in how art and visual cultures help us engage with contemporary questions, particularly those surrounding justice, equity, gender, race, and the environment.
My interests are wide-ranging, from drawing and painting to photography, sculpture and design, from textiles to ceramics and wood. More broadly, I approach visual culture with curiosity, believing that anything can become meaningful once we learn how to look.
I see art history as a way of sharpening attention, a tool for establishing connections, resonances, and open the range of possibilities within images and objects. I don’t claim answers; this space is an invitation to an invitation to look alongside me, to sit with works, and to see what unfolds when we give art the time it asks for.

Willem Steelink, Woman on the lookout, 1885. Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam, Netherlands.