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I work with woven textiles as gestures of care, grief, and reverence. My practice explores ‘thin places’ - landscapes where the boundary between physical and spiritual feels porous. In a recent work, I hiked to the Woolpacks on Kinder Scout, an ancient gritstone formation shaped over 300 million years. There, I draped my textiles over a maternal boulder, a quiet offering to time, place, and memory. In this act, I tend not only to stone but to personal grief and ancestral connection. 

My work moves between gesture and ritual, creating moments where touch, material, and presence form a language beyond words. With a particular interest in prehistorical cave painting, as well as traditional forms of rug making, I work with mediums such as clay, sound, jute and graphite. Embracing these classical and contemporary methods to tell the stories of my own experience. 

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