Wish Station

Close your eyes. Can you hear what your inner voice longs for? Each wish, typed word by word and placed in a glass vessel with satellite wings, is released into the universe.

Presented during the Toronto Design Offsite Festival inside an antique furniture shop, this interactive installation celebrates the simple act of wishing as a reminder of hope, presence, and the pulse of being alive.

Hat-pins

Hat-pins that transform headwear into vessels of expression. More than adornments, they carry pencils, poems, and connections—turning each hat into a storyteller and every pin into a bridge between hearts, minds, and the collective zeitgeist.

This series is a meditation on belonging, expressed through wearable architectures. Brick and mortar, metal structure, tiled surfaces, and interchangeable chimney tops are reimagined as garments, intimate shelters carried on the body. The pieces suggest that home is more than a fixed place; it is a living, shifting entity, an inner hearth that adapts and transforms with us, offering warmth and a sense of belonging wherever we go.

A Home for a Home

Land of Giants

humans hunting shadows…

In our unrelenting quest to conquer the unknown and unravel the unfamiliar, we often overlook a fundamental truth. As we strive to make sense of everything, we fail to recognize that our perceived control extends only to some realms, while in the vast expanse of the universe, we are but small specks of dust. This piece invites you to contemplate the paradox of human existence – the ceaseless yearning for control in a universe beyond our comprehension, exploring the tension between our desire to command the world and the humbling realization of our inherent smallness. Are we truly in control, or do we dance to the mysterious rhythms of the cosmos, forever seeking our place within it?

Wordiology invites you to explore the delicate equilibrium between the spoken word and the mind’s interpretation.

Worn as a sculptural reflection of word and mind, it asks you to ponder the shifting interplay between language and cognition: do the roots of words sustain the branches of thought, or do we, as perceivers, shape the very essence of these linguistic blooms?

Wordiology