Through my love for interior design, I unexpectedly rediscovered something I once thought I had lost: creativity, a strong need to create.

Where it all began
As a child, I was always drawing. Sketchbooks filled up quickly, loose papers were scattered everywhere and creating felt as natural as breathing. It was not something I questioned — it was simply part of who I was. But somewhere along the way, while growing up, I suddenly stopped. Responsibilities replaced imagination, and creativity quietly faded into the background. Not consciously, not dramatically — it just disappeared.
For years, I did not really notice the absence.
Falling in love with interior design and rediscovering creativity
It was only later, through my deepening love for interior design, that something began to shift. I became fascinated by atmosphere, materials, balance, texture and the way art can transform a space. I realized that a home is more than furniture and color palettes — it is emotion, identity and energy. And slowly, very quietly, my hands started wanting to create again.
Finding stillness through horseback riding
An important turning point was when I decided to start horseback riding again after a long break. Returning to the stable gave me something I had not realized I was missing: mental clarity. Being around horses forces you into the present moment. There is no room for endless scrolling, no background noise of social media, no pressure to perform. Just rhythm, movement, breath, and stillness.
That space became a form of detox.
And in that space, creativity resurfaced.

Creating art without a rulebook
I did not attend art school. I do not have a degree in fine arts. Everything I create is the result of experimentation, expression, intuition, and trial and error. I test materials. I layer paint. I scrape, rebuild, adjust and sometimes completely start over. Each piece is a process. Each work teaches me something new.
My art is tactile, layered and deeply connected to interior atmosphere. I am drawn to earthy tones, subtle contrasts, texture and works that shift with the light throughout the day. I love when a painting feels calm from a distance, yet reveals depth and detail up close. For me, art should not overpower a space — it should complete it.
The beginning of an artistic path
What makes this journey even more meaningful is the thought that my creations might one day find a place in someone else’s home. The idea that a piece I made could become part of someone’s daily life, their quiet mornings, their evenings with friends, their safe space — that feels incredibly special. Art becomes most powerful when it lives within an interior and interacts with light, architecture and personal stories.
I am still at the very beginning of my artistic path. There is so much to learn, so much to explore and so much to refine. But that is also what excites me. Growth is part of the process. Experimentation is part of the story.
I hope this is just the start of a long journey — and I sincerely hope our paths will cross many more times along the way.

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