wisteria

This on going body of work—spanning both murals and sculptural forms—centers on wisteria, the Japanese climbing vine that weaves itself to this day across the walls of my childhood home. For eighteen years, its cascading blossoms marked the rhythm of seasons and became a living thread through memory, belonging, and change.

In these works, wisteria becomes more than a botanical subject; it is a language of space, an expression of how environments hold emotion and time. The murals trace its fluid growth across surfaces, echoing the way memory clings, spreads, and transforms the spaces we inhabit. The sculptures, by contrast, distill this organic movement into form—capturing the tension between fragility and endurance, nostalgia and renewal.

Through this series, I explore the intersection of space, experience, and art—how the places we grow within shape our sense of self, and how art can become a continuation of those spaces. Creating these murals and sculptures around the world, each piece acts as a spatial memory, inviting viewers to walk through the same quiet wonder.