Future Archaeologies

This body of work brought together fragments from my ongoing practice into a temporary constellation. Using x-ray imagery, discarded film, found negatives, and analog manipulations, the installation explored ideas of residue, memory, and the imprint of pr

This body of work brought together fragments from my ongoing practice into a temporary constellation. Using x-ray imagery, discarded film, found negatives, and analog manipulations, the installation explored ideas of residue, memory, and the imprint of presence and absence.

The materials - both personal and anonymous - acted as evidence of life lived, touched, or thrown away, pointing to the fragile traces we leave behind. Children interacted with ghost limbs in the window. Strangers passed in reflection. Across the glass, hand-wired letters spelled out a phrase: “future archaeologies.”

In many ways, this exhibition marked a moment of pause within a moving process. A space where things could be seen not as final works but as exposed impressions - held together by light, tape, thread, and chance.