About me…
Half American and half Greek, I moved to Paris about three years ago without knowing anyone or speaking French. I quickly fell in love with the city, the country, and the culture, and slowly began building a life rooted in curiosity and creativity. Over time, I’ve made more space for the things that move me most—among them, linocut printmaking.
I’ve been carving and printing for several years, drawn to the meditative rhythm of the process—the quiet focus of drawing, the tactile resistance of the carving, and the surprise that each impression reveals. Printmaking, for me, is both grounding and liberating. It’s a practice that connects body, material, and intuition.
I grew up on Long Island, New York, surrounded by tides, salt marshes, and sea air. Water was part of me long before I could name it. It was only by moving away that I understood how deeply it lived within me—and how its absence left a hollow space. In my work, I return to water as a force of connection, inspired by thinkers such as Astrida Neimanis, Vandana Shiva, and Robin Wall Kimmerer. Water flows through stone, whales, oceans, and our own bodies. It carries memory across beings and through time.
Through linocut, I explore these circulations and transformations. Each incision changes the plate; each print becomes its own story. My work invites us to feel not outside nature’s cycles, but immersed within them—participants in an ongoing flow of transformation, reciprocity, and renewal.