Heath is an art, and art is health
A way to see, feel, and evolve
Painting becomes a way to explore perception, emotion, and the subtle shifts that shape how we experience ourselves and the world
A practice where art and science meet
My paintings emerge from the same processes that guide my work in behavioral medicine: attention, embodiment, and the courage to stay with what unfolds. I paint to explore experience — not to illustrate it. Through movement, texture, and color, I follow the body’s intelligence and let it shape the work.
Each piece is a trace of inner movement, a moment where sensation becomes form. Art, for me, is another way of thinking. A method. A way of making the invisible visible.
The art of connecting
My work often starts with people — gestures, glances, fragments of everyday life. Portraits and cityscapes become ways to capture movement, memory, and the quiet stories that pass between individuals and places. Inspiration comes from connecting with other humans and with their environments. With the emotions that are held in a single moment of light or color.
Navigating uncertainty
Painting teaches me to move with uncertainty rather than against it. Each image grows through decisions that shift, dissolve, or take unexpected turns — a reminder that control is often an illusion. In the studio, I practice letting go of the fantasy of perfection and instead meet what emerges with honesty. Art becomes a way to stay present with change and to trust the movement rather than the outcome.
Unpredictable by nature
I’m drawn to materials that refuse to be fully controlled. Watercolor follows the force of water more than the painter’s intention, creating flows and edges that can’t be repeated. Soft pastels build in layers that shift, break, and reveal unexpected tones. Working with these mediums keeps the process alive — a dialogue between intention and the unpredictable, where the final image grows through movement rather than mastery.



















