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::About::
I hold a BA from New York University in Art History, Psychology, and Studio Art, and a Master of Professional Studies in Creativity Development and Art Therapy from Pratt Institute. I also completed a Certificate in Medicinal Plant Studies through Cornell University. My clinical experience includes co-creating and managing the first mental health program at University Settlement’s Children’s Corner in Brownsville, Brooklyn; co-creating the first mental health program at The League’s Education and Treatment Center’s LAND Gallery; and working on the inpatient acute psychiatric unit at NYU Langone Medical Center.
Alongside this work, I served as Director of Development at RxArt, a nonprofit that transforms healthcare environments through site-specific contemporary art installations. I am also a working artist and a lifelong practitioner of classical ballet and intuitive movement, disciplines that continue to inform how I understand embodiment, rhythm, and expression.
School of Seraphs emerged from years of witnessing how systems of power shape our understanding of mental health, happiness, illness, and fulfillment. This practice centers on supporting people to reclaim their own knowledge by listening to intuition, body wisdom, and lived experience, especially where institutional frameworks have narrowed what is considered valid or healthy. Healing, in this view, is not confined to the brain; it includes the full body and the spirit, held within relational and cultural context.
By integrating multiple ways of knowing: clinical, creative, ancestral, and somatic, we begin to restore a sense of familiarity and belonging that can relieve the suffering of isolation. Attending to history, environment, and inherited patterns allows us to move beyond self-blame and toward accountability for the systems that have shaped our pain. Context matters. When it is acknowledged, new possibilities for care and liberation emerge.
We all deserve access to liberating, humane support that honors complexity, restores agency, and meets us as whole beings.