My work explores the fluid spaces between embodiment and dissolution, where myth, memory, and transformation intersect. Rooted in my Hungarian background and inspired by the folklore and fairy tales of Eastern Europe, I draw on archetypal figures such as The Little Mermaid and Dracula to reflect on desire, metamorphosis, and the liminal state of being neither one thing nor another. These mythic resonances merge with an elemental influence, water, as both subject and metaphor for change, continuity, and the dissolution of boundaries.
Across sculpture, watercolor, and mylar drawings, I create forms that shift between the organic and the ethereal. Sculptures resist fixed states, appearing fluid and in motion, while watercolors evoke dreamlike landscapes of subconscious emotion. The mylar drawings, intricate and meditative, reveal hybrid figures that carry both human and otherworldly qualities, embodying the tension between fragility and transcendence.
Together, these works invite viewers into an immersive, contemplative space, an exhibition that reveals transformation not as a single moment but as a continuous state of becoming. The interplay of media highlights both the physicality of form and the ungraspable nature of presence, offering a poetic meditation on myth, identity, and the beauty of impermanence.