Through oil painting and drawings on panels, my work explores the shared experiences of invisibility amongst BIPOC women, feminine identified people, and those that take on domestic labor. These works provide a space in which women can subvert erasure. My paintings on canvas and wooden panel materialize from a rich color palette consisting of thick, impasto paint embossed with embroidered patterns that form feminine figures in embrace. These figures are juxtaposed against flatly painted female figures embedded in patterns. By merging the flatness of solid patterns with highly textured figures, the work alludes to the experiences of invisibility and visibility that are tied to womanhood and domesticity. It also delves into the ways in which women move between spaces of invisibility as they navigate different roles in the home. The feminine figures in my paintings are interwoven with silhouetted patterns performing gender roles associated with domesticity, such as mother and caretaker. From this inception, it is my aim that the viewer will permit themselves to envision who or what roles may be hidden or invisible in their own lives.