My practice explores the body as a political and symbolic territory, a space for resistance, transformation, and self-determination. Through sculpture, photography, performance, and digital interventions, I reconfigure symbols of femininity, power, and violence, converting them into instruments of emancipation. Drawing from pop aesthetics and queer culture, my research-led practice articulates projects suspended between irony and manifesto, questioning identities that are performed or imposed. Empowerment emerges as a practice of self-recognition: not a mere representation, but an embodied experience. My works function as relational devices, inviting the audience to renegotiate their position within systems of gender, power, and social expectations.