A Shift.
This shift toward a more studio-centered practice is not a withdrawal, but a refinement. It allows time to stretch, materials to speak more slowly, and ideas to mature without urgency. The work now asks fewer questions of the outside world, and more of me.
I make this space to gently separate the work from noise and constant content, so it can be encountered with attention, and on its own terms. In doing so, I seek out a community of like-minded individuals who engage with the work beyond acquisition, and who see it not merely as a decorative object, but as something to live with and return to.