My multi-disciplinary practice involves drawing, photography, collage and storytelling with a recent expansion into costuming. My work weaves together the natural and the supernatural, the real and the surreal, to create fantastical narratives inspired by local folklore and the natural landscape.
In my recent work, I investigate the shifting portrayals of women in folklore, focusing on how their original representations often differ from the ways their characters evolve through time and storytelling. I am interested in the cultural significance of these shifts and the impact they may have on personal identity. I am also interested in the concept of perspective when it comes to storytelling and how a narrative can be altered through the personal lived experiences of the storyteller.
At my recent residency in the Burren College of Art, I explored the Bean Sí’s transformation from mourner to monster. I became particularly interested in the descriptive language used by men in their accounts of encountering her.





