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How Memory and Flowers Brought Angela Meijer Back to Herself

How Memory and Flowers Brought Angela Meijer Back to Herself
How Memory and Flowers Brought Angela Meijer Back to Herself
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Angela Meijer

In this interview for the Arts to Hearts Project, we sat down with Angela Meijer, a mixed-media artist whose creative path has taken her from fine art photography to daily painting, collage, and surface design. In this conversation, Angela shares how motherhood, nature, and quiet moments shaped her work and how she found her way back to the camera in a new and unexpected way.

She discusses using flowers as a visual language, layering memory and emotion into each piece, and how she’s bringing her art into everyday life through pattern design. Through her story, we learn what it means to start again, to follow curiosity, and to build a creative life that evolves and grows with you.

Angela Meijer is a featured artist in our book, “101 ArtBook – Abstract Edition” You can explore her journey and the stories of other artists by purchasing the book here:

https://shop.artstoheartsproject.com/products/the-creative-process-book

Angela Meijer is a mixed-media artist whose work blends photography, painting, and digital collage to explore the emotional language of flowers and memory. She began her creative journey in fine art photography, earning a BFA nearly 30 years ago. After two decades of creating abstract paintings driven by intuition, Angela returned to the camera in 2021 with a renewed perspective—layering floral photography with expressive marks, pastels, and paint. Her current work is rooted in the symbolic language of flowers and inspired by the stories women carry, the beauty of impermanence, and the quiet magic of daily creative practice. Her artwork is held in private and corporate collections internationally.

1.    Your early work in the Netherlands centred on fine art photography—what drew you to self-portraiture and visual storytelling through body language?    

  In my early work as a fine art photographer in the Netherlands, I was drawn to self-portraiture as a means of expressing emotions I didn’t yet have words for. I would sit or stand in front of the camera, waiting until I could feel the emotion settle into my body—until I could embody what I was trying to say without speaking. I became captivated by the quiet expressiveness of hands—how, when people talked about things that mattered deeply, their gestures often revealed more than their words. That unspoken language of movement and emotion became central to my visual storytelling. This sensitivity continues to shape my mixed-media practice today. Whether I’m layering flowers, painting, or pastel, I’m still reaching for a form of expression that lives beyond the boundaries of English—where art becomes its own language, speaking in colour, gesture, and feeling.

Angela Meijer, Up Like The Daffodils, 2025, 16×20 Inches, Photograph, Oil Sticks, Charcoal, Cold Wax and Pigment Inks on Cold Press Paper

2.  How did becoming a mother influence your shift from photography to daily painting, and what surprised you most about that transition?  

Becoming a mother marked a profound turning point in my life as a creative person. We had moved to a friend’s ranch, twenty minutes from the nearest town—a quiet, expansive place far removed from the cities where I’d always lived and worked. At home with my daughter, surrounded by vast skies and stillness, I found myself with time to reflect, observe, and begin again. My background in photography had focused on portraiture, but in that season of solitude and slowness, something shifted.

I came across an article on Joan Mitchell in Art in America, and seeing her work ignited a deep longing to paint abstractly, freely, without the constraints of the lens. I bought my first set of paints, stretched a few canvases, and after that, I never looked back. I eventually sold my large-format camera to invest in more art supplies. We gave away our television, and my days began to fill with reading, writing, wandering outdoors, and making art alongside my daughter. That rhythm—rooted in presence, simplicity, and discovery—found its way into my paintings. It surprised me how naturally the visual language of abstraction could hold all of it: the quiet joy, the sensory richness of motherhood, and the transformation unfolding inside me.

Angela Meijer, Harvest of Memories, 2025, 30×40 Inches, Acrylic and Photograph on Canvas.

3.  You describe your current work as vibrant and non-representational—what emotions or experiences are you channelling through these inner landscapes?    

Honestly, I don’t begin a painting to express a specific emotion or experience. My work isn’t conceptual or representational in that way. I’m not trying to depict something defined—instead, I allow the painting to unfold from within. Whatever I’m thinking, feeling, or processing internally often finds its way into the work, whether I mean for it to or not. I respond to what appears on the surface—each brushstroke leading to the next, each colour interaction shaping the mood. Over time, these choices form a kind of visual language, and a story begins to emerge. It’s a process of discovery, where I’m both listening and responding, letting the painting evolve into what it wants to become.

Honestly, I don’t begin a painting to express a specific emotion or experience. My work isn’t conceptual or representational in that way. I’m not trying to depict something defined—instead, I allow the painting to unfold from within. Whatever I’m thinking, feeling, or processing internally often finds its way into the work, whether I mean for it to or not. I respond to what appears on the surface—each brushstroke leading to the next, each colour interaction shaping the atmosphere. Over time, these choices form a kind of visual language, and a story begins to emerge. It’s a process of discovery, where I’m both listening and responding, letting the painting evolve into what it wants to become.

Angela Meijer, In Living Colour, 2024, 30×40 Inches, Acrylic and photography on canvas.

4.  What role did flowers play in helping you merge photography and painting into one creative language? 

Honestly, I don’t begin a painting to express a specific emotion or experience. My work isn’t conceptual or representational in that way. I’m not trying to depict something defined—instead, I allow the painting to unfold from within. Whatever I’m thinking, feeling, or processing internally often finds its way into the work, whether I mean for it to or not. I respond to what appears on the surface—each brushstroke leading to the next, each colour interaction shaping the atmosphere. Over time, these choices form a kind of visual language, and a story begins to emerge. It’s a process of discovery, where I’m both listening and responding, letting the painting evolve into what it wants to become.

In 2023, I began photographing flowers as if they were portraits—capturing their quiet gestures and emotional presence. It felt like a return to my early work in portraiture, but this time through the lens of nature. Instead of printing on traditional photo paper, I used a giclée printer and cold-press paper, which imparted a painterly quality to the images. When I discovered clear gesso, I began painting directly onto the prints, merging photography and painting into one expressive surface. From there, collage naturally entered the process—monoprints, digital fragments, torn textures—all layered with oil sticks, pastels, cold wax, and charcoal. Flowers have become a bridge between my past and present work, serving as symbols of beauty, memory, and transformation, and a means to unify all my mediums under a single visual language.

Angela Meijer

5.   Surface pattern design seems to bring your art into everyday life. How does it feel to see your work on fabrics and home goods? 

I’ve dreamt of creating artistic wallpaper and fabric for nearly 15 years. I could always envision creativity blooming across the walls of a home, infusing everyday spaces with colour, story, and a sense of joy. Now, as my skills begin to catch up with that long-held vision, it truly feels like a dream coming to life. I’ve just ordered my first wallpaper samples, and I’m thrilled to start bringing them into our own home. The idea that these designs might bring joie de vivre into other people’s spaces, too—that’s the most meaningful part of it all.

Angela Meijer, Douze Fleurs, 2023, 16×20 Inches, Acrylic, Oil Stick, and Pigment Inks on Canvas.

6.   What advice would you give to women artists who are navigating motherhood, identity shifts, and creative reinvention?

I believe you can live many lives within one lifetime. Don’t be afraid to pivot—to say, this no longer serves my well-being, and to bravely invest your time and talents in a new direction. Reinvention is not failure—it’s a sign of growth, clarity, and trust in your voice. And know this: raising a child is a monumental creative act in itself. When your children witness you making art, honouring your intuition, and embracing change, they learn to do the same. They become more self-aware, expressive, and open to the inevitable transitions in life. Sharing creativity with them becomes not only a joy but a gift that echoes far beyond your studio walls. All three of my daughters are now studying art, and watching them grow into such thoughtful, talented artists has been one of the greatest affirmations of my path.

Angela Meijer, Interior Mockup by Creatsy with Surface Pattern Design on Walls, Bedding, Lampshade and Rug. The artwork on the Wall is The Gardener, 2024, 24×30 Inches, Acrylic, Collage and Oil Stick on Canvas.

Angela Meijer’s work brings together many pieces of her life—photography, painting, writing, and the small things that often go unnoticed. Her art is built layer by layer, guided by what she’s feeling, thinking, or remembering in the moment. Whether she’s capturing flowers through her lens or turning a painting into wallpaper, she shows us that creativity can live anywhere, and that it’s never too late to try something new. Through Angela’s journey, we’ve learned that making art can be a way to stay present, to let go of what no longer fits, and to carry stories forward in new forms.

To learn more about Angela, click the following links to visit her profile.

Arts to Hearts Project is a global media, publishing, and education company for
Artists & Creatives: An international audience will see your work of art, patrons, collectors, gallerists, and fellow artists: access exclusive publishing opportunities and over 1,000 resources to grow your career and connect with like-minded creatives worldwide. Click here to learn about our open calls.

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