Who am I? Good question. I ask myself it every day.
I suppose, like my collages, I am a mixture of things: bits of experiences, memories, genes, and desires. Sometimes organized, sometimes chaotic, but always mine.
I started making collages as a form of therapy, of exploration, of searching. I had tried drawing and painting, but I felt like something was missing. Instead, by cutting out images that already exist and giving them another life, I found a way to say what I didn’t know I wanted to say.
For me, collage is just that: taking fragments of the world—from magazines, books, photos, whatever—and putting them together into a new narrative. Giving my voice to what others have already created. Re-signifying. Finding myself.
I believe that being an artist is having the ability to decode the world, or rather, the stimuli that reach us from it, in a unique and individual way. I marvel at how each tree, each flower, each person is different. That diversity speaks to me of something divine: our ability to reveal a unique part of reality.
Being an artist, for me, is being sensitive to that. It’s daring to know oneself, to find oneself, and to expose oneself.
And if what I manage to evoke an emotion in someone else, then I know my worldview has had a small impact.
I don’t intend to move anyone with my art… (or maybe I do).
I’m just trying to empty, unload, and release what’s swirling around inside me.
I’ve worked in data analysis for SMEs and multinationals for over 15 years. Boring, but it’s been a lifeline, so I’m not complaining…
Since 2021, I have been training as a body and spiritual therapist, guided by Shiatsu and Kabbalah. I studied at the EJS in Madrid and at Mario Sabán’s School of Psychology and Kabbalah.
I love to dance freely, enjoy the vibrations of music in my body, and I’m always accompanied by some inspiring psychedelic rhythm while I make my collages.