Madeleine Creuzot (b. 2002) is a French artist based in
London. Her practice begins with women: their inner
worlds, their relationships, their capacity for
transformation. Through painting, she develops a symbolic
visual language that honours the emotional, intuitive, and
shared dimensions of feminine experience. Her images are
rooted in connection, rhythm, and the quiet force of
presence.
Her early work carried the urgency of protest. It named
harm, confronted erasure, and marked the psychic weight
of structural violence. Over time, her practice underwent a
shift. She chose not to remain in reaction but to turn fully
toward creation. What followed was not a withdrawal from
politics, but a deeper commitment. She began to centre
love, joy, and sorority as the foundation of a new visual
language.
This love is not conceptual. It is lived, chosen, and
practiced. It emerges in the way her paintings gather
memory, myth, emotion, and intuition into forms that
resist fixed meaning. Her work offers not explanations but
atmosphere. Her paintings become spaces where women
are returned to themselves, not as subjects to be decoded,
but as forces to be held, witnessed, and celebrated.
This love is not conceptual. It is lived, chosen, and practiced.
It emerges in the way her paintings gather memory, myth,
emotion, and intuition into forms that resist fixed meaning.
Her work offers not explanations but atmosphere. Her
paintings become spaces where women are returned to
themselves, not as subjects to be decoded, but as forces to
be held, witnessed, and celebrated.
Madeleine’s commitment to her practice is unwavering. She
paints for women: for our freedom, our complexity, and our
pleasure. Her work does not ask to be interpreted through
systems that have excluded us. Instead, it proposes an
entirely different way of being. In a space made by women
and for women, she offers a visual world grounded in
solidarity, in joy, and in the clear and quiet certainty that
freedom can be felt and shared.
Her work accompanies women on a path of joyful
emancipation, one that invites us to imagine, together, what
it feels like to be whole, to be free, and to belong to one another.