My work begins where memory and spirit meet — in the quiet space between what has been lost and what continues to live through us. I create from a place of inheritance, where ancestry is not only remembered but felt. Each branch, rope, and painted figure becomes a trace of those who came before me — a language of presence that speaks through material. My practice is a personal dialogue with my late brother Dineo, with my family’s blended faiths, and with the broader rhythms of Tswana spirituality. Through sculpture and painting, I explore how the dead remain among us — shaping our emotions, our choices, and our ways of belonging. My art invites viewers to reflect on their own lineages, to recognize that we are all, in some way, haunted by love, memory, and the echoes of those who made us who we are.