Biography:
I was born in Xalapa, the cultural capital of Mexico, where colors, traditions, and the power of nature shaped my earliest memories. At the age of 19, driven by curiosity and the desire to explore new horizons, I left my homeland to settle in Paris, where I lived for four years and studied art at the school « Prep’Art ». This period allowed me to build the technical and theoretical foundations of my practice while immersing myself in Europe’s vibrant cultural scene.
Since 2013, my main activity in Lausanne, Switzerland, as a multidisciplinary visual artist is expressed through various mediums – painting, sculpture, video, photography, and textiles – with a constant: an intensity of color and a freedom of gesture that give my creations both spontaneity and depth. Each artwork is an invitation to collective reflection and shared responsibility, while carrying the imprint of my Mexican roots.
My art explores themes that have always accompanied me: the meaning of life, self-transformation, impulsivity, movement, and the imperfect beauty of everyday existence. In my works, color becomes a vital energy, a universal language that seeks to connect people.
Over the years, I have created more than 200 works, exhibited several times in Switzerland. I have also explored illustration and writing, publishing my first children’s book, Pouff la tortue bleue.
Beyond forms and materials, my artistic approach is a quest: to transform fragility and difference into creative strength, and to offer through art a light that reminds us that each of us holds the power to reinvent the world.
Artistic approach:
« My art is a source, not a career »
Creative process and objectives
In my creative process, what matters to me is being open and leaving space for the subconscious. I intentionally give room to the unexpected, to letting go, to impulsivity and/or spontaneity.
The essence of my artistic journey is therefore based on empathy, because I invite each person to remember that within us lies a creative force and an ability to transform our environment.
My art is characterized by an exploration of color through gestures and movements that give it a new dimension. I also value the simplicity of forms. I draw inspiration from reality and from my dreams, with complete freedom and a touch of modernity. I try to bring my perspective to subjects of daily life, but also with a political dimension.
Philosophical reflections and artistic values
I see life as if everything is created dynamically, almost spontaneously and unthinkingly. Everything is in constant motion.
Impulsivity can, in fact, be an asset when it comes to making decisions during creation.
Moreover, it seems to me that art is the reflection of life on this Earth. I question this way of life that has partly become an individualistic competition. Why do we always seek more? So, I lay down my bow and arrow, weary of this endless escalation, because for me it is not a competition like “the weakest link.”
I seek sharing emotions to feel understood, and less alone! If, through my art, I can help others reflect, so much the better! And it is in this spirit that I create my art.
Life is an adventure, with its risks and its “flaws.” The beauty of life requires that we accept the darkest side of ourselves.
I hear people around me say: “Life is beautiful, life is ugly, life is a range of colors.”
For me, life simply IS. Each of us judges and feels life according to our experience, our existence, our fears, our hopes. I don’t wait for color to come to me. I prefer to bring color into my life and radiate it into the world.
And one day, who knows, maybe I will get closer to my childhood dream: to make the world more beautiful. As a child, I never imagined the world could be so cruel, so unjust, so inhuman… And when I realized it was utopian to think I could save the world, I decided to begin by saving myself… Trying, through my art, to make the world more beautiful, more just, more human.
To illuminate the world around me, and one day, peacefully, depart.
“Art does not reproduce the visible; it makes visible.” – Paul Klee