DEVOUR OR BE DEVOURED
Fall 2025 - Spring 2026
BFA Thesis Collection
100% Vintage Chinese Floral Printed Cotton
100% Chinese Hand Woven Cotton
100% Grey Japanese Selvedge Cotton Denim
100% Mint Polyester Fleece
100% Dusty Pink Polyester Fleece
100% Mint-Green Blend Polyester Long Pile Fleece
100% Brown Polyester Striped Fleece
100% Cream White Polyester Faux Fox Fur
100% Off-White Polyester Faux Rabbit Fur
92% Polyamide,8% Polyurethane Army Green Twill
100% Polyamide Red Tech
100% Chinese Hand Woven Cotton
100% Grey Japanese Selvedge Cotton Denim
100% Mint Polyester Fleece
100% Dusty Pink Polyester Fleece
100% Mint-Green Blend Polyester Long Pile Fleece
100% Brown Polyester Striped Fleece
100% Cream White Polyester Faux Fox Fur
100% Off-White Polyester Faux Rabbit Fur
92% Polyamide,8% Polyurethane Army Green Twill
100% Polyamide Red Tech
Desire is worn. It attaches to the vskin, reshapes posture, swells proportions, stains and stitches itself into muscles and bones.
This collection examines human’s relationship with their desire through the lens of consumption and transformation, asking a central question: When fulfilling our desires, do we sustain ourselves or position us to be devoured?
Drawing from Maslow’s hierarchy, this collection examines two forces shaping human behavior: physical consumption tied to survival, and symbolic consumption tied to self-actualization. By merging the worlds of Chinese food markets and the furry subculture, it imagines a marketplace where humans physically transform. A place where food stalls become sites for trading not just goods, but identity and fantasy.
Here, flesh and self are processed, packaged, and purchased, offering both the needs that root us as animals and the desires that set us apart.
This collection examines human’s relationship with their desire through the lens of consumption and transformation, asking a central question: When fulfilling our desires, do we sustain ourselves or position us to be devoured?
Drawing from Maslow’s hierarchy, this collection examines two forces shaping human behavior: physical consumption tied to survival, and symbolic consumption tied to self-actualization. By merging the worlds of Chinese food markets and the furry subculture, it imagines a marketplace where humans physically transform. A place where food stalls become sites for trading not just goods, but identity and fantasy.
Here, flesh and self are processed, packaged, and purchased, offering both the needs that root us as animals and the desires that set us apart.