Public practice is where my research becomes collective. Through workshops, storytelling, exhibitions, games, and facilitated conversations, I create opportunities for people to gather around questions that matter: how we care for one another, how we relate to materials and place, and how we imagine more just and regenerative futures. I am interested in designing conditions for participation, where diverse forms of knowledge, lived experience, and cultural perspectives can meet. Whether working with students, communities, institutions, or organisations, I see public practice as an invitation to slow down, pay attention, and explore new possibilities together.