I am an interdisciplinary artist whose practice centres on the embodied experience of being-in-place, drawn to the emotional, sensory, and psychological relationships we form with the environments we inhabit.
My work engages with themes of dis/placement, particularly in relation to culture, language, and territory. I am interested in how the internal displacement experienced by previous generations in Norway — their choices, silences, and circumstances — ripple forward, shaping the lives and identities of present and future generations.
Walking forms an integral part of my process. I move through landscapes and linger in places, tuning into what arises emotionally and somatically in those moments. Memories and impressions surface unexpectedly, and I respond to these encounters through a range of media including photography, film, sound, text, and site-specific installation.
A central concern in my practice is the exploration of shame — how it manifests, hides, or transforms across time and space. I make links between the strategies I use in my current practice and those I employed as a teenager — particularly forms of counter-cultural positioning — as a way to investigate emotional undercurrents that remain unresolved. I ask: can shame be accessed, understood, or even reshaped through visual and embodied practice?
My approach is deliberately multi-disciplinary. I choose materials and methods that resonate with the emotional and conceptual demands of each project, allowing form to follow feeling.
I graduated with First Class Honours in Creative Arts from the Open College of the Arts in 2025. I also hold a Master’s degree in Development Studies from the University of East Anglia, and a Cand. Mag. (BA equivalent) in Social Anthropology from the Arctic University of Norway.
