My performance art practice draws deeply from the well of cultural rituals, household objects, and traditional forms of living. Rooted in an exploration of inherited values and community memory, my work reactivates familiar gestures and everyday materials, transforming them into carriers of contemporary meaning.
Through the use of local objects and traditional attire, I create performances that initially appear as ritualistic or repetitive acts — echoing the patterns of cultural ceremonies. However, beneath this surface familiarity lies a critical narrative: my work engages with urgent geopolitical issues, questioning power structures, displacement, identity, and resilience.
The repetition in my actions mirrors the persistence of cultural practices, but also highlights the cycles of political tension and socio-economic upheaval that mark our times. Household materials — symbols of intimacy, survival, and domesticity — become metaphors for larger systems, turning the private into the political.
The site of performance, whether in a gallery, public space, or natural landscape, becomes a temporary altar where the past converses with the present. The audience is invited not only to witness, but to contemplate the deeper layers hidden within the familiar — to recognize how cultural forms can both preserve and challenge the realities we inhabit.