I am a designer, researcher, and painter whose work explores design as a form of care, agency, and responsibility. My practice moves between research-led writing, material experimentation, and visual production, engaging questions of ethics, power, memory, and embodiment.
I was educated in England, where I studied History and Political Economy at King’s College London, grounding my work in historical analysis, systems thinking, and political context. I am currently completing an MS in Strategic Design and Management at Parsons School of Design in New York, where my work focuses on design ethics, organisational systems, and the relationship between structure and lived experience.
Having lived across Lagos, London, and New York, my perspective is shaped by navigating different cultural, economic, and institutional systems. This transnational experience informs my interest in how power, access, and agency are designed and how design can either constrain or expand the conditions of everyday life.
My research and writing examine design not only as problem solving, but as a rehabilitative and relational practice, one that shapes how people move, choose, and are seen within larger systems. Alongside this work, I maintain an active material practice rooted in painting and handwork, where the body becomes a site for thinking through memory, tension, and transformation. Material serves as a parallel mode of inquiry, allowing questions raised in writing and research to be tested through form, texture, and image.
My work sits at the intersection of design, ethics, and material intelligence. I am interested in roles and collaborations that value authorship, rigor, and care, where design is understood not only as output, but as a way of structuring relationships, systems, and meaning.