About my practice
As an Intuitive Artist, my creative output spans a wide variety of mediums. Embracing the contemplative way, I approach each day as a spiritual practice. Sustained silent devotion nurtures my receptivity to the stillness within myself and to the sacredness of all. This vocation arose from an innate, life-long sensibility to the numinous. My work, shaped by an enduring journey of exploration and transformation, bridges the arts, mental health, and spiritual growth. Through creative expression, intentional design, and the joyful cultivation of Divine Play and Sacred Space, I craft objects and experiences that invite reflection and connection. All of my offerings are informed by daily rituals and long-standing interest in philosophical and spiritual inquiry. I seek to foster connection, contemplation, and shared humanity by reclaiming space for peaceful presence and the sacred in everyday life.
Lately, my work has been exploring the intersections of gender, spiritual autonomy, and the cultural construction of value. Can contemporary devotion and handcraft be forms of resistance to social and economic structures that often extract labor, limit autonomy and inhibit individuals from living in alignment with their true essence and calling?
I am interested in how women throughout history have navigated systems that sought to constrain their freedom of expression. Self-determination and female spiritual authority, outside of sanctioned containment was usually treated as problematic. Women who claimed it, were often marginalized, pathologized or worse. Since then, social advancements have seeded some liberty, but even for modern women, self-valuation is still largely seen as transgressive. Openly declaring: My value is intrinsic. I am inherently worthy and whole. I have value irrespective of any affiliation remains an audacious statement. Paradoxically, this position of self-respect and autonomy does not imply a rejection of community. On the contrary, it allows for empowered, healthy interdependence.
My work also reflects on motherhood and explores how creative and devotional practice can serve as a form of mothering oneβs self and others. As a woman who has not birthed children of her own, I experience Mother Energy as a vast energy that presents as an enveloping, witnessing, cradling, replenishing, genderless, force. I myself have been mothered not only by my women friends and mentors, but also by the ocean, the sun, the wind, and even by certain men. And, it is my hope that through my art and other heartfelt acts of grace, that I have been mother to many.
Today, as I enter my Crone years, I also see my work as restorative. It and I, restore a missing image. Framing age as culmination rather than decline. I remain steadfast in exploring new models for creativity, communion, companionship, community. And most crucially, in honor of the lineage of women who came before me, I continue to reclaim my sovereignty over my shame.
M.U. 2026