Moondance holds the slow choreography of an extended mountain walk in Banff National Park. This itinerant architecture was repetitiously carried, unpacked, constructed, inhabited, deconstructed and re-packed over several days and nights, operating as both refuge and companion to the solo walker. En route, each interaction was a gesture of ecological and material correspondence; in the studio, iterative mark-making transformed memory into meditative texts and imaginative trajectories. Later, suspended in the forest and illuminated in the early morning light, it hovered as a drawing of air and of attention – a shimmering inquiry into the ethics of inhabitation.


























































