It began with a wall.
I was looking for something that felt right — something that belonged. I found pieces that were beautiful, thoughtful, and well-made. But none of them held anything personal. Nothing that felt like mine.
That's when I understood what was missing. Not art. But meaning.
My background is in advertising, where every idea begins by asking the right question. I studied at the J.J. Institute of Applied Art in India and later at the Academy of Art in San Francisco, and spent years working as an Art Director and Designer.
That experience shaped how I think. How I listen, how I refine, how I uncover what truly matters beneath the surface.
Over time, those questions became more personal.
What makes something feel like it belongs?
What makes it feel like yours?
Art became my way of answering that.
What started as something I made for my own space grew into something I began sharing with others. I still remember one of my first commissioned pieces — built from a collection of small, meaningful details. On their own, they were simple. Together, they became something lasting.
That moment stayed with me.
Now, when I create, I begin the same way. By listening. By paying attention to what's felt, what's remembered, and what's worth holding onto.
Because the most meaningful work isn't just seen.
It's something you live with.