About


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My story


The invisible world has been the greatest muse of my life.


I have long been drawn to questions of how people understand what cannot be seen - how meaning is created through belief, imagination, symbols, and cultural belief systems.

This has led me to studying magic and witchcraft, and into exploring how people of the past made sense of what could not be seen, how they explained their world, and built meaning within it. 


Magic and witchcraft are not only phenomena of the past. They are closely tied to questions of power, knowledge, gender, and belief - and continue to echo in the ways we understand ourselves and the world today.


Alongside research, I have for a long time been curious about different cosmologies and ways of thinking: Buddhism, Hinduism, mythology, folklore, animism, and shamanism.

My ongoing PhD research focuses on medieval Northern magic and the meanings of the feminine within the magic discourse.


My work moves between research and creative practice. 

Through it, I open up spaces for new ways of thinking about magic, witchcraft, and the feminine, and deepening the understanding of the invisible world around us.