In 2017 I visited Pripyat, the ghost town closest to the site of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.Over the past thirty years nature that was destroyed by human hubris and incompetence has grown up to dominate the abandoned man-made structures.I began to embroider plants overtaking the people and buildings onto photographs of Budapest, the city I was living in.Since then I have added images to this series with each new city my art has taken me to, including Vienna, Beijing, Chicago, Kyiv and Las Vegas.Although presented in a whimsical fashion, using an intimate scale and a “feminine” craft technique like embroidery, on closer examination the implications of these pieces become more sinister. As plants seemingly grow uncontrollably through the buildings and streets, people are either absent or oblivious to the situation. Viewers are left to wonder about this change in dynamic, what preceded it, and what will prevent it.The resulting works exist in an ambiguous space: a shift has clearly occurred, but nature has fought back and new life has grown from it.I have recently expanded this series by adding architectural imagery and plant embroideries into found embroidery on traditional linens found in flea markets and thrift stores. These linens evoke domesticity and the feeling of home.Yet the apocalyptic imagery depicted on the textiles creates a dissonance which, combined with the absence of actual people in the scene, that raises unsettling questions about what happened to the former residents.