Christina Bridges Glover (b. 1995) is an interdisciplinary artist working out of a private studio at Art Tooth Studios in Fort Worth, Texas. Currently completing a BFA in Studio Art: Sculpture, with a minor in Art History at the University of North Texas, Christina creates mirrored sculptures engraved with laser-cut patterns that explore trauma, resilience, and memory. Central to their work is the lily, a symbol of quiet endurance and cyclical rebirth. The lilies growing in Christina’s backyard—planted by their grandparents over three decades ago—have outlived their natural lifespan, serving as a living metaphor for surviving PTSD and emerging stronger through each season of struggle. Influenced by the flowing, organic forms of Art Nouveau, Christina adopts this early modernist style not only to evoke a closeness to nature, but also to signal a shift in perspective. Just as Art Nouveau marked a departure from tradition and embraced a new way of seeing the world, Christina uses it to represent a reimagined framework for understanding their own experience with PTSD—one that acknowledges pain while also making space for reflection, transformation, and healing. Their sculptures function as “monochromatic memory palaces,” immersive environments where light, shadow, and reflection converge to invite deeper contemplation of time, identity, and emotional endurance.