My artistic practice explores the historical interaction of, and the relationship between, the essence of human origins in various stages of creation, and the universe, specifically the Earth. I investigate the encounter and intersection between the human spirit and natural/raw matter in the context of religion in contemporary art, using raw, tangible, and intangible materials to create an installation artwork.

Profoundly inspired by the ancient Islamic Abrahamic stories of human life being created from earthly matter, my work embraces the understanding that all matter is connected. Thus, to reunite myself with the elemental substances of the world, I use the tangible materials of dust, wet earth, clay and pottery to provoke the intangible, spiritual human ‘soul’. Different colours and textures of sand, clay and soil found in varying geographical formations are used as metaphors for the diversity of ethnicities, genders, and cultures found among humans. These abiotic geological materials invite the viewer to relationally connect with a range of histories and subjective understandings of the contradictory ways of seeing and knowing that are all connected through universal origins.