I was fascinated by medieval medical imagination when I was in my 3rd year at school. I was fascinated by the way the body and fluids were perceived. There was a slightly esoteric approach, we used mystery to explain things we didn't understand otherwise.
At the same time, I was quite interested in botany and medicinal plants. Linking the two, in my research I'd found images in archives of books on medicinal plants, with handwriting that wasn't always legible, and magnificent illustrations...
In fact, I wasn't so much interested in knowing what plant I was seeing in these pictures, but rather the fact that they were slightly illegible, which allowed me to use my imagination. And in the end, does it exist, or doesn't it exist... everything is possible in fact. I like this ambiguity. When you're drawing plants, it doesn't matter whether they're representations of reality or whether everything is invented. Anything can be a plant as long as there's a leaf, a flower, and any colour, you'll always understand that it's a plant. And from there, you can explore a huge range of graphic forms.