Architecture of Grief is an ongoing body of installation, sculpture, and textile work exploring how mourning moves through space, memory, and collective ritual.
Architecture of Grief is an immersive architectural framework that restores visibility to mourning. Drawing from Victorian domestic rituals, celestial mapping, textile traditions and photography, the project constructs spaces where grief is witnessed rather than hidden.
Each elemental functions as both object and threshold—a rug that records touch, a ceiling that holds the night sky, a writing table for communal testimony, a wall that bears the weight of memory.
The work asks: What if grief had architecture?
What if mourning was not private, but spatial?
Threshold — The Parlor
Antique lace panels suspended in arc form.
Domestic labor becomes memorial surface.
What was once intimate becomes collective.
Writing Table and Witness Wall and Textile — The Parlor
A long communal table lit by candlelight.
Visitors leave words.
Language settles into the room as presence.
Walls become the only witness.
A woven field absorbs the room’s presence.
Witness Wall and view from the Writing Table - The Parlor
Dark Heart
Dark Heart explores the tension between rupture and connection.
One heart split in half, remaining teathered by delicate filaments, circled by lunar moths.
The heart stands as a witness to transformation.
Submerged Veil Rug — The Parlor
Fragment(s)
Lace doilies are cast in encaustic and mounted as individual relics.
Many are donated in memory of someone lost.
Together they form a dispersed field across the wall—mourning as accumulation rather than event.
Fragment(s)
Fragments
The Veil
In many cultures, white marks transition. The Veil expands this tradition through large-scale collage and architectural installation, positioning white as veil, threshold, and reflective surface — a space where grief becomes visible without spectacle.
Smaller galleries invite an intimate screen. In larger spaces, it becomes a permeable room inviting movement within and around the veil.
The Veil
Veils - En Suite
The Veils
1/4 Mourning
A 12 x 12 grid of illuminated blue glass insulators forms a charged field with one node missing at the center. The work considers how life continues while something essential remains structurally missing.
1/4 Mourning
Golden Hour Rug
A circular wool field calibrated to shifting light.
Touch alters the surface.
Return reveals change.
Golden Hour - Warm
Golde Hour - Cool
Golden Hour - Texture detail
Considering Room
The work explores the architecture of deliberation — the quiet space between impulse and action — where presence itself becomes the central act.
Considering Room
Considering Chandelier
Cosmic Room
A suspended night sky calibrated to shifting constellations.
Two skies exist at once-above and below collapse.
The body lies between them.
Cosmic Room
Moonlit Rug
Cosmology of Love Poem
The Pier (Witness/Approach)
Two images: one in motion, one still.
Grief is the distance between passing and standing.
The Pier
She Drinks the Moon
Three figures stand as quiet guardians of grief.
Each holds a different sky— current, memory, and what remains unseen.
The body becomes vessel.
Emotion moves through form like tide through the body.
She Drinks the Moon