I am an artist and community organizer based between Stanford and Ho Chi Minh City. My practice is rooted in
anti-imperialist politics, the everyday, and the collective imagination of what could be. I work across digital
and print media to explore how art can disrupt, regenerate, and build spaces of
care—especially within violent and pervasive systems designed to surveil, isolate, and suppress.
Using code and automation, I explore how these tools shape our perception and serve as a means to critically analyze and compose Internet video archives. How can automated content generation be harnessed for political, poetic, and critical purposes? This work interrogates the digital footprint produced by the intersection of heteropatriarchy, hypermasculinity, and social media.
It features a collage of videos from content creators and Internet celebrities discussing societal expectations—how men should act, how women should behave toward men, and the broader implications of these narratives.