About:
Visual artist and graphic designer, currently working at Kolker Kolker Epstein Architects. My practice focuses on creating visual worlds at the intersection of art, design, and architecture. This fusion lets me move freely across mediums and build alternative realities that invite the viewer to pause, look, and reconsider the familiar. Growing up in a home immersed in art gave me an early sensitivity to material, image, and visual culture. I trained in graphic design at Shenkar and video at the Open University, and later earned a B.A. in Art History from Tel Aviv University—studies that broadened my conceptual foundation and continue to inform my work. My art is driven by curiosity and a search for depth in everyday reality. I draw on themes of childhood, space, art history, architecture, current events, and human existence, transforming them into raw materials—sometimes explicit, sometimes hidden within new imagery. Beginning with large-scale handmade collages of paper, photography, and text, I gradually moved into the digital realm, combining photography, illustration, graphic processing, and digital drawing. Some works start with photographs of everyday objects, transformed through layered editing until they leave their original context; others, like my series on Frank Gehry, begin with drawing and evolve digitally. Through this, I create worlds that shift between the tangible and the surreal: at times documentary-like, at times dreamlike, always reassembling reality in new ways. My work aims to challenge the familiar and reexamine how we perceive and experience the world around us.
