
About
I am many things, more than I expected to become in my life. In my career, every role I embraced has always been interconnected with the other. At the heart of everything I do there is a simple conviction: bodies are never neutral, in fact, they represent the place where power acts and where dissent is born.
My work brings together art, theory, rituals and symbolism to challenge dominant narratives and make room for voices that have been systematically marginalized.
I studied Philosophy at the University of Milan and Women's and Gender Studies at Alma Mater in Bologna and Universidad de Granada. Through my studies I learned to question systems of knowledge and through feminisms, queer theories, and visual arts I developed a different centre of gravity in my thinking.
I use tarot, astrology, folklore, and mysticism as forms of critical expression and liberation because I believe all these practices are ancestral tools that we still deeply need for personal exploration, creativity development, and collective healing.
For too long, hegemonic culture has dismissed and suppressed esoteric traditions and, for this reason, I take these practices as seriously as academic knowledge and I recognize that the boundary between alternative epistemologies has always been a matter of power. Reclaiming spirituality is, for me, an act of resistance, so yes, you can call me a witch without reservations.
I am also a cultural curator, researcher, and lecturer. Through my research I explore art as a political action and embodied, intersectional experience. I do this with a multidisciplinary approach, a way of making the political personal, and the personal political.
I am currently training as a death doula (or end-of-life doula). Accompanying people through the final stages of life and in grief is, for me, a natural continuation of my journey. It involves caring for the person and their body at their most vulnerable, paying attention to rituals, and reflecting on the experience of transitioning from this life to the next.
I believe that how we approach death reveals everything about how we understand life.

About
I am many things, more than I expected to become in my life. In my career, every role I embraced has always been interconnected with the other. At the heart of everything I do there is a simple conviction: bodies are never neutral, in fact, they represent the place where power acts and where dissent is born.
My work brings together art, theory, rituals and symbolism to challenge dominant narratives and make room for voices that have been systematically marginalized.
I studied Philosophy at the University of Milan and Women's and Gender Studies at Alma Mater in Bologna and Universidad de Granada. Through my studies I learned to question systems of knowledge and through feminisms, queer theories, and visual arts I developed a different centre of gravity in my thinking.
I use tarot, astrology, folklore, and mysticism as forms of critical expression and liberation because I believe all these practices are ancestral tools that we still deeply need for personal exploration, creativity development, and collective healing.
For too long, hegemonic culture has dismissed and suppressed esoteric traditions and, for this reason, I take these practices as seriously as academic knowledge and I recognize that the boundary between alternative epistemologies has always been a matter of power. Reclaiming spirituality is, for me, an act of resistance, so yes, you can call me a witch without reservations.
I am also a cultural curator, researcher, and lecturer. Through my research I explore art as a political action and embodied, intersectional experience. I do this with a multidisciplinary approach, a way of making the political personal, and the personal political.
I am currently training as a death doula (or end-of-life doula). Accompanying people through the final stages of life and in grief is, for me, a natural continuation of my journey. It involves caring for the person and their body at their most vulnerable, paying attention to rituals, and reflecting on the experience of transitioning from this life to the next.
I believe that how we approach death reveals everything about how we understand life.