I have recently been reading Phenomenology of Perception by Maurice Merleau-Ponty and, although it is a book I am still slowly making my way through, many of its ideas have stayed with me. It has helped me find words for something I have long felt intuitively through painting: that our relationship with the world begins not through thought alone, but through feeling, sensation, and presence. Painting, for me, begins in a place that exists before language. It emerges from emotions, memories, and subtle inner movements that cannot always be explained but can be deeply felt. Through layers of color, movement, and atmosphere, I seek to create spaces where viewers can slow down, reconnect with themselves, and return to the immediacy of experience. Merleau-Ponty’s understanding of perception as a way of opening ourselves to the richness and mystery of existence resonates deeply with my practice. I see painting as an act of attention, a practice of listening. Rather than representing a fixed reality, my work invites an encounter with feeling, intuition, and wonder. For me, painting is ultimately an act of remembering: remembering how to feel, how to listen, and how to be fully present within the unfolding experience of being alive.