My second solo show, Fantasma, examines the intrinsic relationships between humans, animals, and nature—how we are them and need them, and how they are us and need us, forming a sacred ecology of ‘we.’ However, our connections to the modern world have distanced us from our true nature, rendering us ghosts—fantasma—in our own worlds. By embracing curiosity in what we create, fantasy and mythological machinery become symbols of capitalist distortions, endearments to our creations, and calls to return. Calling us back to each other, to animals, to earth—an invitation to lovingly weave ourselves back into the interdependence of all life.