Research Through Travel
Travel is an active research tool in my practice.
This project documents how movement through different places informs my understanding of culture, identity, and contemporary aesthetics.
Material, Craft and Color | Medina of Morocco
In the medina of Morocco, textile dyeing unfolds as a living process.
Color is produced collectively, shaped by tradition, climate and repetition.
Documenting these spaces sharpened my understanding of how material culture carries identity — and how craft continues to inform contemporary aesthetics beyond industrial systems.
Florence | Museo del Bargello
Inside the Museo del Bargello, architectural details and furniture once belonging to the Medici family reveal how design operates as a language of power, permanence, and identity.
The carved wooden seating, the patterned walls, and the filtered light through historic glass speak of a time when form was inseparable from symbolism.
Observing these objects today reframes them beyond heritage: they become references for how material culture travels across centuries.
This encounter reinforced my interest in how past aesthetics continue to inform contemporary design — not as nostalgia, but as continuity.
Landscape, Technology and Scale | Taíba Dunes, Ceará, Brazil
The dunes of Taíba reveal a dialogue between nature and technology.
Wind, sand and energy infrastructure reshape the perception of scale and movement.
Walking through this landscape informed my understanding of contemporary territory — where sustainability, body and environment coexist in tension and balance.