I’m an environmental anthropologist and visual storyteller exploring how ecological and technological systems shape our relationships with the planet, with other species, and with each other. My work moves across research, design, and advocacy, rooted in the belief that the stories we tell about nature influence how we care for it. Currently, I’m studying Planetary Health, with a focus on how technologies like AI are reshaping our sense of connection to landscapes, to animals, and to the communities we’re part of. I’ve developed digital tools for environmental monitoring, written about sloth bears and algae as climate storytellers, and collaborated with NGOs on community-based humanitarian relief efforts.
Across projects, I’m drawn to overlooked perspectives, interdisciplinary approaches, and the quiet power of unlikely collaborations. I care about the spaces where knowledge systems meet (scientific, cultural, indigenous, and technological), and what becomes possible when we listen across those boundaries. Themes I keep returning to: biodiversity, environmental justice, care, creative resilience. The threads running through my work are less about any one discipline and more about the connections that hold things together, and how we can tend to them.
I’m always open to collaborations, conversations, and opportunities that align with my work, especially those grounded in care, curiosity, and creativity. If something sparks your interest or you’d like to explore working together, feel free to reach out.