Taste and Labels: The Thesis

Evolving is undeniable.

The more I curate my quiet corners, on and off TikTok, the clearer the essence of Taste + Labels becomes. What I’m drawn to is not just beauty, but the theatre life offers when moments are treated with intention.

Having worked in hospitality and with a natural pull toward art, design, and energy in motion, I’ve always been fascinated by how ordinary rituals are transformed into experiences. How space, light, timing, and restraint can elevate the everyday into something that feels composed, almost staged, yet deeply human.

This has become a personal quest. Discovering moments turned into experiences, and the people who create them for themselves and for others. Creators who understand that life, when approached with care, becomes its own art installation. This is about the curation of moments. Treating the smallest details as portals to awe, love, and emotion. A table set with intention. A pause held just long enough. Butter shaped like a Michelangelo sculpture, not for spectacle, but for delight. These are the experiences that feel worth living for.

At Taste + Labels, being the Auteur, the director of experience, feels like the most natural role I’ve ever stepped into, while remaining endlessly curious and open to discovering new ones every day. Theatrically Living is the refusal to let a moment pass without acknowledging its potential for beauty and connection. It is choosing authorship over autopilot. Presence over projection.

Meaning over noise. Moving forward, Taste + Labels becomes a gathering space for those who curate life as an installation. For food that reads like art. For moments shaped with intention. Tightening the core of this vision has been a deeply satisfying discovery, one that brings clarity and momentum, and one I’m excited to continue developing with care. As it evolves, so will the circle. Calling in magicians of their craft, creators who understand that presence is an art form, and that the smallest details can carry the most meaning. This is not a movement to announce, but a way of living to embody. The work continues, and the invitation remains open.