Motivated by the expansiveness of space and the beauty contained within, Angela Fink infuses the entirety of her soul into every creative project she touches.
Giving Space Meaning
When someone asks me what I do, what can I say? I play too many parts, wear too many hats to rattle them off to the kind soul making small talk with me.
Because what they don’t know, which I don’t blame them for, is that it’s more than small talk. What I do is who I am: I create, I direct, I pick up the broken pieces of my larger-than-life emotions and place them in a mosaic of meaning, a story I can share with those whose hearts are open enough to hear me.
I know that’s not the answer they’re looking for, even if it’s the one I want to give.
Because that’s what I feel in my bones—all the stories I have told and have yet to tell. I see them in every empty space, blank pages waiting to be filled with the depth and breadth of my creative being.
I see an empty room as the story of a life well-lived, a reflection of the souls that inhabit it—an invitation to design a feeling more than a space.
I see the human body as an outlet for individual expression, for personal truth, manifesting in the visual and tactile sensations of clothing—a soul projected onto a canvas of draped layers and designer labels.
I see a brand as a story yet to be spun—a meaningful narrative that can break through the white noise of the echo chamber, powered by authenticity and integrity.
I see each moment as the story I will one day tell—my daughter Lola as a tale of self-discovery and endless curiosity in a world that needs it; the unfathomable beauty of the wide-open expanses we stumble across on our travels; my own life as a trajectory yet unfinished but moving toward some mystery of a masterpiece.
So, what do I do?
I create.
I direct.
I tell the stories I can’t bear to hold inside.
The Kiniko Cup
Three years ago , like many other, I found myself in search of something elusive—a sanctuary amid the chaos. Lockdown confined me, prompting a yearning for the tranqulity.
Seeking Balance
How do we meet ourselves in the middle—our past selves who said yes to everything in pursuit of our larger-than-life dreams and our current selves who have found the value in saying no.