After leaving her native Sweden for London she started to show her sound reactive animations at clubs around London where her art quickly became noticed by different club promoters and DJs. This led to bigger performances in super clubs like the Ministry of Sound in London and music festivals all over Europe, such as the Glastonbury Festival (UK), Name Festival (France) and Streetparade (Switzerland) to name a few.
Many multinational companies (for example Microsoft, Intel and Vodafone) has hired Bopa to perform at their events. She has also released a DVD, Retro Chic, through the label MixMash (UK) and a track on another DVD, Clubvisual Vol.3 has just been released with the label DVJ Vision (US).
Bopa has collaborated with many musical artists. For The Streets' UK Tour 2006 she designed the animations for the multi-screen setup with projections and LEDs. She also works with Tunng, an electronic folk band from the UK. Together they have performed at some of Britain's most famous concert halls, such as the Queen Elisabeth Hall and the Purcell Room.
In 2007 she became, as part of the audiovisual collective Ne1co, voted at Nr 6 in DJ Mags poll for the world's top 20 VJs.
Bopa also creates audio/visual installations. In april 2008 she showed a video/slide installation using moving head projectors, at the Tate Britain for one of their Late at Tate events together with the VJ-team Bruno Tait. In December 2008 she exhibited another audiovisual piece created as a collaboration with Bruno Tait at the gallery Salon Projektionist in Vienna called "‘Frames per second”.
To try and use her art to make good in this world she has collaborated with Oxfam on many of their campaigns (Make Poverty History, Make Trade Fair and Control Arms) to spread their messages to young people through the projections at music festivals and concerts.