Born in Iran and currently based in the Italian countryside, I am a multidisciplinary artist, and my practice explores the tension between presence and absence through repetition, structure, and duration.

Grounded in quiet observation of everyday life, my work investigates the fragile threshold where attention begins to shift and focus starts to dissolve. Through repetitive gestures and sustained processes of mark-making, I approach the surface as both a mapping of the mind and a space for slowing thought. While inspired by the concentration and immediacy embodied in the Japanese Enso, my work extends this gesture through repetition, duration, and accumulation across different materials and mediums.

Within this process, structure becomes both support and limitation, revealing instability within order. Repetition functions as a way of working through time, where rhythm, perception, and attention slowly accumulate and blur.

My process is both physical and mental. I work over extended periods until exhaustion begins to affect body, mind and material.. At this point, the work starts to register not only intention, but also fatigue, interruption, and the quiet breakdown of control.

What interests me most is this threshold state: between attention and dissolution, construction and collapse, presence and absence. Each gesture carries both assertion and withdrawal, becoming a trace of time passing, attention shifting, and limits being reached.

Ultimately, my work reflects a dialogue between internal and external worlds, where balance and instability coexist within the same fragile space.