Whether situated within institutional or non-institutional contexts, my research is guided by open inquiry rather than the pursuit of definitive proof. At its core, this practice is about creating spaces of curiosity, presence, and collectivity—spaces in which the boundaries between researcher and research, subject and object, can soften and shift.
By moving away from an understanding of knowledge production as a solitary and purely intellectual process, my work approaches research as an embodied, relational, and shared experience. Research becomes a space for experimentation, exchange, listening, and connection, where the role of the researcher is continually questioned and re-negotiated.
A central aspect of my research on spatial production involves taking responsibility for how resources, attention, and perspectives are distributed. This includes challenging knowledge frameworks rooted in colonial structures and opening space for ways of knowing that have existed for centuries—often held in bodies, practices, and lived experience rather than institutional language.