I create characters because they are pieces of me.
Little Red Riding Hood is my alter ego.
She is the version of me I was once afraid of — the bold, sexual, powerful, instinctual self I was taught to fear. She walked into the forest thinking the wolf was the threat… and realized she was never the prey. She is my shadow integrated. My sovereignty. My embodiment. The woman who owns her darkness instead of running from it.
Tinker Bell is my truth.
She is small but fierce. Emotional, loyal, protective, explosive when boundaries are crossed. She represents my moral core — my refusal to be silent, my stand against bullying, my belief in honesty and authenticity even when it costs me.
The Little Mermaid is my desire.
She is curiosity, longing, and hunger for more than the world she was given. She represents my need to expand, to feel deeply, to experience life fully, to leave spaces that no longer fit who I am becoming.
Alice is my mind.
She questions reality. She breaks rules. She thinks differently. She represents my creativity, my consciousness, my ability to see beyond the surface and design worlds instead of just living in them.
Together, these characters form one identity:
me.
My art is Gothic, sensual, emotional, hyper-real — but at its core, it is about embodiment and healing. I create from lived experience: learning to love my body, transforming pain into presence, embracing my alter ego, becoming a mother, surviving myself, and choosing authenticity over approval.
I don’t follow trends.
I don’t copy.
I don’t dilute myself to be palatable.
I create for the ones who feel different.
For the ones who feel too much.
For the ones who were told to be smaller, quieter, less sexual, less emotional, less powerful.
My work is a mirror.
A space where you don’t need permission to exist.
Where you’re allowed to feel power and pleasure.
Where softness is strength.
Where shadow is not shame.
Where being different is the point.
My art isn’t meant to be consumed.
It’s meant to be inhabited.
I’m not here to be an aesthetic.
I’m here to build a world.
A world where people can look at my work and think:
“This feels like me.”
Because if you see yourself in my art, that’s not coincidence —
that’s recognition.
I don’t create content.
I create a mythology of becoming.
And my message is simple:
You don’t need permission to be who you are.
You are allowed to feel alive.
You are allowed to feel desire.
You are allowed to take up space.
You are allowed to exist fully.
This is not just my art.
This is my transformation — shared.
And if it awakens something in you,
that’s because it was already there.












