The installation Habitat evokes the beauty and
diversity of the natural world that has been
documented by botanists and artists for centuries.
Habitat gives this concept a dynamic, modern
interpretation. By using light as a medium, the
plants are not merely displayed as static
specimens but as living beings thriving in the
spotlight. Like a botanical collection celebrating
nature’s diversity, Habitat offers visitors an
immersive experience – a space where art and
nature merge, inviting a renewed encounter with
the complexity of the plant world.
In times of ecological upheaval and existential
fragility, artist understand my her art as an open space of resonance: for nature, spirit, and humanity. Her installations ask about our place in the world –
and our responsibility within it. Habitat, glowing
and yet fragile, becomes a symbol of transience –
captured in a cycle of light, growth, and finitude.
Visual artist whose practice merges art and science to explore themes of transformation, impermanence, and the fluid boundaries of the human body. Drawing from biology, evolutionary theory, and systems thinking, she creates paintings and installations that reflect on natural and social phenomena—such as life cycles, decay, and regeneration.
Her work investigates how identity and physical form can dissolve and reconfigure, often imagining alternative, post-Darwinian futures where bodies and desires evolve beyond binary categories. By combining analytical observation with poetic sensibility, she invites viewers to rethink the relationship between nature, technology, and human experience.