Something is always being held in the body, and when the body remembers, it moves.
I am a dance artist creating movement-based work rooted in mental health, boundaries, and care. My research treats the body as both site and archive, holding lived experience, memory, and physical knowledge. I develop choreography through phrase work, gesture, research, and conversation, allowing movement to emerge through sharp, powerful actions alongside moments of yielding.
My practice prioritizes listening as a choreographic approach. I am invested in how dancers grow through process and how boundary-setting shapes movement and collaboration. By emphasizing presence and physical honesty, my practice invites audiences to connect through shared bodily experience. I aim to create spaces where care, recognition, and permission can be felt rather than explained.