

The Story Behind the Art
The Story Behind the Art
The Story Behind the Art
From early experimentation to refined craftsmanship, each piece reflects a pursuit of controlled beauty.
From early experimentation to refined craftsmanship, each piece reflects a pursuit of controlled beauty.
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My Story
My Story
I started drawing early on, spending hours putting ideas on paper. Shapes, structures, thoughts. It was my first way of making the invisible visible.
Creativity has always been my core, but eventually, drawing wasn't enough. I didn't just want to design things; I wanted to create them.
I started drawing early on, spending hours putting ideas on paper. Shapes, structures, thoughts. It was my first way of making the invisible visible.
Creativity has always been my core, but eventually, drawing wasn't enough. I didn't just want to design things; I wanted to create them.
I started drawing early on, spending hours putting ideas on paper. Shapes, structures, thoughts. It was my first way of making the invisible visible.
Creativity has always been my core, but eventually, drawing wasn't enough. I didn't just want to design things; I wanted to create them.

My Story

My path into art was never linear.
Growing up in a family of architects, I was surrounded by creativity, design and craftsmanship from an early age. I spent countless hours drawing, working on my own projects and experimenting with new ideas, always searching for something that truly felt like my own path.
On the one hand, I worked in a metal workshop, creating and selling rings. On the other hand, I discovered glass as a material and became increasingly fascinated by its possibilities.
Since 2021, I have been developing my own technique to shape the material through controlled fractures, transforming destruction into something entirely new.
My path into art was never linear.
Growing up in a family of architects, I was surrounded by creativity, design and craftsmanship from an early age. I spent countless hours drawing, working on my own projects and experimenting with new ideas, always searching for something that truly felt like my own path.
On the one hand, I worked in a metal workshop, creating and selling rings. On the other hand, I discovered glass as a material and became increasingly fascinated by its possibilities.
Since 2021, I have been developing my own technique to shape the material through controlled fractures, transforming destruction into something entirely new.
My path into art was never linear.
Growing up in a family of architects, I was surrounded by creativity, design and craftsmanship from an early age. I spent countless hours drawing, working on my own projects and experimenting with new ideas, always searching for something that truly felt like my own path.
On the one hand, I worked in a metal workshop, creating and selling rings. On the other hand, I discovered glass as a material and became increasingly fascinated by its possibilities.
Since 2021, I have been developing my own technique to shape the material through controlled fractures, transforming destruction into something entirely new.
What began as a hobby became a full-time pursuit, gaining global attention. Social media transformed everything, attracting interest in my art from around the world.
My works span various locations: New York, Dubai, Belo Horizonte, Zurich, Berlin, and Vienna, each telling a unique story.
What began as a hobby became a full-time pursuit, gaining global attention. Social media transformed everything, attracting interest in my art from around the world.
My works span various locations: New York, Dubai, Belo Horizonte, Zurich, Berlin, and Vienna, each telling a unique story.
What began as a hobby became a full-time pursuit, gaining global attention. Social media transformed everything, attracting interest in my art from around the world.
My works span various locations: New York, Dubai, Belo Horizonte, Zurich, Berlin, and Vienna, each telling a unique story.


What can look like destruction from the outside is, in reality, a controlled process.
Every strike changes the structure of the glass. It determines how it breaks. The line between a break and total shattering is thin, because you have to hit the glass with the right precision and force. In that moment, the artwork is created.
What can look like destruction from the outside is, in reality, a controlled process.
Every strike changes the structure of the glass. It determines how it breaks. The line between a break and total shattering is thin, because you have to hit the glass with the right precision and force. In that moment, the artwork is created.
What can look like destruction from the outside is, in reality, a controlled process.
Every strike changes the structure of the glass. It determines how it breaks. The line between a break and total shattering is thin, because you have to hit the glass with the right precision and force. In that moment, the artwork is created.
And that is exactly what I love about my art. Every time I start from the beginning, it still drives me not to give up, but to keep going. Just because something fails does not mean the first attempt was pointless.
Every failed attempt teaches me to accept failure as part of making. In the end, there is that one moment when everything clicks. All the tension releases and a strong feeling of satisfaction and pride remains. That is exactly what I want viewers to feel as well.
And that is exactly what I love about my art. Every time I start from the beginning, it still drives me not to give up, but to keep going. Just because something fails does not mean the first attempt was pointless.
Every failed attempt teaches me to accept failure as part of making. In the end, there is that one moment when everything clicks. All the tension releases and a strong feeling of satisfaction and pride remains. That is exactly what I want viewers to feel as well.
And that is exactly what I love about my art. Every time I start from the beginning, it still drives me not to give up, but to keep going. Just because something fails does not mean the first attempt was pointless.
Every failed attempt teaches me to accept failure as part of making. In the end, there is that one moment when everything clicks. All the tension releases and a strong feeling of satisfaction and pride remains. That is exactly what I want viewers to feel as well.
