Between 2016 and 2020, my work focused on the relationship between space and memory across different disciplines. During this period, I explored how places are experienced, remembered, and transformed through time, translating these impressions into drawings, paintings, mixed media works, and other forms of visual expression. As theme I had a lot of interest in the difference between nature and culture, building and landscaping.
Rather than describing space literally, I was interested in its emotional and poetic dimension — the way a room, landscape, or interior can hold traces of presence, atmosphere, and memory. Through layering, reduction, and careful attention to line, texture, and composition, I sought to create works that evoke both the physical structure of space and the more intangible experience of remembering it.
This body of work forms an important part of my artistic development, connecting my background in architecture and design with a more personal and intuitive visual language.