Art is deeply intimate to me. It is not something I create from a distance—it comes directly from within me. Every painting I make carries a part of my inner self, my emotions, my thoughts, and my experiences. In many ways, each artwork becomes a “mini me,” a reflection of who I am at a particular moment in time. When people look at my paintings, they are not just seeing colours, patterns, or abstract forms; they are seeing fragments of my world and my existence.
There are moments when creating feels almost spiritual, as though my life depends on it. The process pulls me into a different state of mind where everything around me fades away, leaving only the conversation between myself and the canvas. In those moments, art becomes more than expression—it becomes survival, purpose, and vision.


To me, creating art is also about creating the future. Every new painting feels like a possibility waiting to unfold. I see each piece as something capable of changing my life, opening new doors, and shifting how people experience the world around them. I believe art has the power to influence perspective, to spark emotion, and to make people pause and see beauty, complexity, or meaning in places they may have overlooked before.
One of the most exciting parts of my practice is the arrival of a new idea. Whenever inspiration comes, I feel a rush of excitement that is difficult to describe—almost like winning a jackpot. A new concept immediately fills me with anticipation because I never know which idea might become the breakthrough piece that transforms everything for me. Every idea feels important. Every inspiration carries the potential for something life-changing.
What makes my process even more personal is the creative spirit that exists while I work. Every painting is influenced by my emotional and mental state during that period of creation. My moods, experiences, surroundings, conversations, and even current events all shape the final outcome of the work. Sometimes the energy is joyful and expressive; other times it is reflective, restless, or intense. Whatever I am experiencing inevitably finds its way into the painting.
This is also why recreating a work of art can be so difficult. Even if I attempt to repeat the same composition or concept, the emotional atmosphere surrounding the original piece can never be fully reproduced. The spirit present during that first moment of creation belongs only to that time.
That is the beauty of art to me—it captures emotions, moments, and pieces of life that can never exist in exactly the same way again.



