Born in Toulouse in 1992, he was introduced to circus at a young age when his parents enrolled him in a circus school, even though they were not part of that world—his father is an architect and his mother a teacher. He continued practicing circus as a hobby at Le Lido in Toulouse, where he discovered Chinese pole, a discipline he still practices today.
After graduating from high school, torn between circus and science, he spent a year studying biology at a technical institute. In the end, the body would indeed become his field of study—but through circus.
He then joined the preparatory program at the Regional Circus Arts Centre in Lomme (near Lille), where he strengthened his foundations in Chinese pole and acrobatics. He went on to spend two years at the Lyon Circus School, which focuses on theatrical performance and contemporary dance; there, he developed his ideas and artistic identity, both on stage and on the Chinese pole.
He was later admitted to the National School of Circus Arts in Rosny-sous-Bois (ENACR), where the first year of higher education takes place, before continuing at the National Centre for Circus Arts (CNAC) in Châlons-en-Champagne. During these three years of advanced training, he combined his skills in dance, theatre, and Chinese pole, in search of an expressive and acrobatic movement language.