There exists a white noise in our everyday lives- a pace at which objects and architecture silently function. The height of a table, the placement of paperclip or the role a concrete slab plays each contain the specific and the arbitrary, while at the same times serve as markers of specific functions or actions. These seemingly invisible marks all have properties and expectations that guide us almost blindly through our day. Routine becomes a sort of faith. I question this faith.

Through my installations, photographs and drawings, I introduce shifts in context, material and perspectives, which allow me to transform the supposed functionality of familiar objects, allowing them to break apart. My work highlights quiet moments; reveling in the wonder of how, for example, the pattern of ceramic tiles bend and shift to envelop their surroundings- acquiring the translucent qualities of light rather than brittleness of silica.

By unarming the viewer of expectation, I am able to slow down the process of looking in order to heighten the visceral, and oftentimes uncanny, quality of experiencing the familiar in a new light. I want to test this fragility of stepping out of our own zones of comfort.