IN BETWEEN - 2025

As I weave, I drift through time—untangling the knots of the past, grounding myself in the present and imagining what the future may hold.

These fibres of raffia, recycled cotton, and sari silk hold both memory and possibility. Through the process of weaving they offer release and renewal.

Weaving is more than method; it is metaphor and language. Its purpose is to preserve, heal, and transform.

The Guardians

Stillness - Presence - Awareness - Antevasin

The Sanskrit word antevasin means ‘one who lives at the border… someone who renounces the comforts of family life in pursuit of the unknown’. This in-between space both culturally and spiritually, lies at the heart of my work. 

From within this threshold space, I question the conditions of contemporary life. Our society is shaped by mass consumption and relentless speed. In response to this, these works embrace slowness as resistance. They invite stillness and awareness. They seek to awaken a cultural shift that honours intentionality and sustainability over the superficial.  

These woven sculptures function as objects of ritual. Standing as guardians, they depict the polarities of structure and wildness, and fragility and strength. These works draw on the fourth stage of spiritual alchemy known as Conjunction. They reimagine transformation as a process-oriented methodology—unfolding through material exploration, conceptual layering, and intuitive inquiry.  

Through Conjunction, we come to recognize what holds true value and we begin to weave these elements together to form our authentic self. As the intangible begins to materialize, polarities within us harmonise and are no longer in conflict. Through this harmony, intuition and emotion merge with intellect and logic. 

These three concepts: antevasin, slowness as resistance and Conjunction, simultaneously inhabit the space of the in-between. Weaving becomes method, metaphor, and language, honouring the intelligence of the hand while viewing transformation as a slow, embodied journey toward wholeness. 

The Guardians

Wild Mother

Wild Mother is the fifth work in The Guardians series. She embodies the legend of Baba Yaga while also aligning with the fifth stage of spiritual alchemy where we see the rebirth of the phoenix from its own ashes. The Guardians are threshold figures: protectors not of stasis, but of becoming. 

Baba Yaga stands as guardian of the wild, of death and rebirth. She is the untamed wilderness, existing at the boundary between life and death. Baba Yaga reigns in the Slavic folktale, ‘Vasalisa the Wise’. She is equally the Old Hag, the Wild Mother, the Grandmother Witch—fearsome, ambiguous, yet deeply just. She does not offer comfort, she offers truth. 

Vasalisa’s journey into the depths of the forest to seek Baba Yaga, is one of initiation. Through a series of impossible tasks, Vasalisa is tested. Not to be punished, but to be revealed. Her reward is to be reunited with her wild feminine intuition.  

These ancient traditions mirror the rhythms of nature, the seasons and the inner self: the burning, the shedding, the letting go of what no longer serves our truth. From the ashes of confrontation and surrender, clarity emerges. We reconnect back to our intuition, to inner authority, to the wild knowing that shows us the way home.  

Like transformation itself, weaving is an embodied journey toward wholeness—requiring patience, surrender, and trust in unseen connections. 

The Archetypes

Self - Persona - Shadow - Anima/Animus

The Elementals

Fire - Water - Earth - Air

Between

I - II - III - IV

Light & Shadow

In Between

Exhibition Images