About the Artist
Where Memory Becomes Art
"My hands remember what my mind sometimes forgets. Each piece is a bridge between worlds, between times, between cultures."
Born in Latin America, now creating from Kingston, Ontario. My work is memory made matter, tradition that breathes, identity that transforms without forgetting where it comes from.

My Journey
Each year has left its mark on my hands and my art.
The Hands Remember
The hands of the women in my family taught mine. Ancestral techniques became my language.
Roots Travel
Migration to Kingston, Ontario. Carrying Latin American memory across borders.
Earth Speaks
Exploring sustainable creation. Experimenting with recycled materials and earth-conscious techniques.
Knowledge Flows
Workshops begin. Art as therapy, creation as connection, hands as teachers.
Cultural Bridge
Spanish through Art program. Language, culture, and creativity united in one experience.
Ocean Alchemy
Exploring salmon leather creation. Transforming fish skin into art, honoring indigenous traditions.
The Leap
Choosing entrepreneurship. Building a sustainable creative practice rooted in cultural heritage.
What Drives My Art
Four pillars that support every piece I create.
Memory & Migration
Each piece carries stories of displacement, belonging, and the resilience of cultural identity.
Ancestral Techniques
Traditional methods passed through generations. My hands honor those who came before.
Sustainable Creation
Exploring eco-conscious techniques. Incorporating recycled materials when possible, learning as I create.
Cultural Bridge
Connecting Latin American heritage with Canadian present. Art without borders.
About Me
I am an artist, a weaver of memories, and a seeker of stories hidden in materials. Born in Santander, Colombia, I grew up surrounded by thread, fabric, and the quiet magic of watching my mother turn scraps into beauty. From her, I learned that art is not taught—it's inherited, and it awakens from within.
I studied Sociology in Bogotá, Colombia, where I discovered the deep social and emotional layers behind every handmade gesture. That perspective shaped my work, rooting it in memory, identity, and transformation.
As I reconnected with my indigenous heritage, I uncovered an ancestral world that had always lived within me. My art became a return, a ritual, a language of belonging.
Today, my practice flows between craft, art, and design. Each piece is guided by intuition and a deep respect for the past, while imagining new, collective futures.
For me, creating is a form of healing, resistance, and connection—a quiet act of hope.