My work has developed across different disciplines while maintaining a continuous investigation into memory, fragility, and transformation. From drawing, sculpture, textiles, installation, and performance to painting as the central focus of my current practice, I have built a language that draws on literature, philosophy, and poetry to address fundamental aspects of the human condition.
Over more than two decades, I have worked with a wide range of materials—paper, fabrics, ceramics, wood, metals, and found objects—exploring the tension between the delicate and the raw, the intimate and the universal. This duality shapes the poetics of my work, which seeks both beauty and unease, placing the viewer in a territory of questions rather than certainties.
In recent years, painting has gained renewed prominence in projects such as La Aurora, where the influence of María Zambrano and Federico García Lorca allows me to explore the dawn as a metaphor for transition: a threshold between what fades and what emerges. Through cycles of vulnerability and resilience, my work seeks to consolidate a personal voice capable of engaging with contemporary debates while resonating with universal human experience.