My work is a love letter to those committed to the work of radical imagination. To abolitionists who dream of a world without police, to midwives, parteras, and medicine people who let the body lead, to the activists walking towards a world with open borders or no borders at all. In my practice, I reconfigure Jewish rituals, prayers, and languages into a form that centers queer and feminist world building, often drawing from my experiences as a birthworker and teacher. Building on practices of radical imagination developed by social activists and scholars, my work explores the role that art-making and ritual plays in creating new frameworks of relationship and power.
I work interdisciplinarily, and seek to continually explore new mediums to find the most engaging and honest way to communicate each project. I have an ongoing fascination with text and lettering. Many of the symbols used throughout this body of work are an abstraction of yiddish lettering, a meditation on language loss, assimilation, and ancestral memory. My relationship to text also comes from my work as an organizer and political artist.




