About me
I am an interdisciplinary artist, researcher, and facilitator working at the intersection of imagination and systems change.
As a Political Science PhD candidate, I study transnational feminist movements and how communities resist structural injustice while imagining alternative futures.
As a visual practitioner, I translate complex ideas into bold, vibrant forms rooted in hope, resilience, and radical love.
As a facilitator, I help groups see patterns, clarify strategy, and build shared language through visual synthesis and participatory dialogue.
Across all of my work, I am interested in one core question: How do we make more just futures feel possible?
I have designed public-facing policy research on housing inequality, developed justice-centered curriculum on food systems, created artwork for feminist movements such as Aurat March, and built interactive installations that invite children and families to reflect on care, belonging, and environmental responsibility. Whether working in forests, classrooms, conference halls, or community spaces, I approach each project as an opportunity to connect research, creativity, and collective imagination.
I believe knowledge should not be confined to institutions. It should travel. It should gather people. It should help us see more clearly the systems shaping our lives, and our power to reshape them.
My practice is grounded in collaboration, curiosity, and care. I work with organizations seeking thoughtful design, research translation, and facilitation support.