I was born in Lima, Peru, and grew up there in the 80s during a time of domestic terrorism and political turmoil. It was during this time in my life that the cognitive foundations of what would become my artistic explorations were set. From my mathematician grandfather, I learned of geometry and perfection in logic, and from my Catholic surroundings, I absorbed the potent iconography and sense of spiritual mystery. Upon leaving Peru at the height of terrorism, I moved with my family first to Montreal, South Carolina, and finally New York, each place bringing me culturally and geographically farther away from my home.

In approaching my art as a studied collection of thoughts and experiences, I am able to piece together my various realities. By creating, I am embarking on a path of self-exploration that reconnects me to lost moments, lost people, lost places, and fading memories. In this process of active reflection, I invent, and my work oscillates between what has been and will be. By combining simple, often geometric shapes with nebulous backgrounds and exploring abstract concepts through various mediums, I explore a tension between the logical and the inexplicable, the same tension I was surrounded with as a child in Lima.