In my work I examine the concept of order and disorder where I look at the ways in which we may seek to regulate the uncertainty of life through control mechanisms, and the relentless disruptions and disarray that surround us that always prevent ultimate attainment of total control over our lives.

I also explore whether we really wish to escape the confines of control structures (both external and self-imposed) and their rules and instructions, or if we readily accept and create directions that afford us freedom from personal responsibility when offered a myriad of choices thus allowing avoidance of self-examination and introspection. My work often incorporates and subverts the forms of standard rules, instructions and our own personal patterns of behaviour where I incorporate habitual routines and repeated, sometimes obsessive, banal actions in creating my work.

The images in my photographic work often signify occurrences or incidents we may encounter that can often imperceptibly affect us but could also be significant elements of change in our lives. I am interested in the conditions that sometimes start a whole chain of events that can disrupt our planned course of action and ultimately alter both ourselves and our lives in unexpected ways.
I often produce images of objects and elements of our surroundings in a somewhat unsettling way where the objects of the familiar and everyday seem to invoke a sense of unease rather than the comfort they are intended for. I explore the use of routine and the familiar to exert a sense of control over our lives, and address the notion that despite our strivings to create an ordered settled environment, there will always be telltale signs of discordance or unsettling situations that occur in these seemingly innocuous places.