
Bronze is one of the earliest materials shaped by humans — an alloy of copper and tin.
For thousands of years, bronze has been shaped into objects of protection, ritual, remembrance, and everyday life.
It carries a sense of history and permanence while remaining grounded and honest.
From the Bronze Age to the ancient Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans, bronze has accompanied humanity through countless generations. Like my work, it is a material of transformation—timeless, endlessly recyclable, and carrying the quiet memory of those who came before us.
I work exclusively with recycled bronze, giving existing metal a new life instead of drawing from newly mined resources.
There is something unique about the bronze I use
I work with material that allows form to emerge slowly, by hand, through touch and intuition. In its raw state, it is soft and malleable, almost like earth. This quality makes it especially suited for shaping organic forms, symbols, and textures that carry meaning rather than perfection.
After firing, the material transforms into solid bronze with a warm, gold-like hue. This moment of transformation is essential to the process — what begins as something fragile becomes enduring, much like the inner experiences these pieces are meant to hold.




