This October, in partnership with Estée Lauder, Fairlawns Boutique Hotel, Platinum Marketing CC, and Art Eye
Gallery. We have cultivated a powerful exhibition dedicated to women affected by breast cancer.
The campaign marks a significant moment of courage, connection, and the celebration of life.
As part of Estée Lauder’s global Breast Cancer Campaign, an initiative that stands in support of life-saving
research, We are invited a select group of female artists to create works that celebrate the strength,
resilience, and spirit of women facing or surviving cancer. These artworks were set to be showcased in a curated
exhibition painted in pink during two intimate events hosted at Fairlawns Boutique Hotel.
Curator’s voice:
“Art as Medicine for the Soul”
Art is not a luxury. It is not a pastime or a pleasant distraction. Art is essential. Because in times of pain, confusion, trauma, or even quiet numbness, art becomes what words cannot: a lifeline for the human spirit. We live in a world that moves fast and that often asks us to suppress, to cope quietly, and to keep going. But the truth is, we are all carrying something – grief, anxiety, loss, longing… And it doesn’t just disappear because we ignore it. Art gives it form.
A song lets you cry when you don’t know why. A painting says the things you didn’t know you were feeling. A poem lets someone, somewhere, finally feel seen. Art gives us back our voice, especially when we’ve forgotten we have one. You don’t have to be an artist to feel the healing power of art. Think of the music that carried you through heartbreak. The film that cracked you open. The mural in your neighbourhood that reminded you of who you are. That’s not entertainment. That’s medicine. Art creates connection, not just to each other, but to ourselves. It helps us process the past…to sit with the present…and imagine a future. In hospitals, it reduces pain. In prisons, it restores dignity. In schools, it gives children the tools to tell their stories. In war zones, it becomes a symbol of hope.
And in all of us, it unlocks something deeply human. When we create, when we engage, when we bear witness to another’s story through art, we remember that we are more than what we’ve endured. We are not just broken, we are becoming. Art doesn’t just decorate our lives. Art is not a luxury. It is a necessity. When words fail…when pain overwhelms…when the world feels too loud or too dark—art steps in. It gives shape to the unspeakable. It holds space for grief, joy, confusion, and hope. It lets us bleed without breaking. Art doesn’t fix us, but it frees us. It tells us, YOU are not alone. Every brushstroke, every note, every line of poetry says, I’ve felt this too. In a world quick to numb us, art wakes us up. It reminds us that healing isn’t a straight line, it’s colour, movement, and sound. It’s expression. It’s connection. So if you’re struggling, turn to art. If you’re healing, share your art. And if you’re thriving, fight for art because someone else needs it now more than ever. Support the arts. Make art. Share art. Because in doing so, we don’t just survive, we begin to truly heal.
Click here to enter the raffle: info@arteye.co.za

Lee Scott – Hempson
In this work, the crow appears not as an omen but as a fierce companion and guide. Known for its intelligence
and adaptability, the crow embodies endurance, resourcefulness, and survival in the harshest of conditions.
Perched in solidarity, it mirrors the women who embrace their scars, who make the brave choice to remain flat
after a mastectomy, and who stand without apology in their reclaim ed bodies. Together, the figure and the
crow carry both solitude and solidarity, speaking to the inner willpower it takes to live with authenticity and to
the community of strength that forms when women share their stories.
Dew at Dusk takes its inspiration from the 1993 Estée Lauder Youth Dew advertisement, in which Paulina
Porizkova’s striking pose captured both beauty and strength. The title itself carries layered meaning: it recalls
the fragrance while also evoking the natural phenomenon of dew, delicate droplets that cling to leaves
and petals, surviving the day’s heat to shimmer again at dusk. Within this image lies a duality of fragility and
endurance, qualities that reflect the resilience and vulnerability of women, whom this work seeks to honour.

Grace da Costa
Grace da Costa sculpts the human form as a testament to endurance, memory, and emotion. Her figures,
whether playful as in Schoolgirls and Boys or monumental like The Sentinels, embody the spectrum of human
experience. Each carries both the fragility and the resilience of the body, revealing how vulnerability and
strength are never opposites but deeply intertwined . In ever y curve, fold, and gesture lies the quiet courage of
survival, and in every surface, the unspoken story of transformation.

Grace da Costa
With Pin-Up and Madonna, Da Costa turns her gaze toward the dualities of femininity and the cultural weight
carried by women’s bodies. The piece engages with the iconography of womanhood , both the objectified
allure of the pin-up and the sanctified purity of the Madonna . By placing these figures side by side, she
challenges the binary expectations imposed on women, asking instead how vulnerability, sexuality, sanctity, and
strength can coexist within a single form.

Juanita Frier
The work speaks to resilience in the face of impermanence. The act of layering and erasure mirrors the process
of survival itself: the courage to endure change, to carr y forward the fragments that remain, and to find
meaning even in absence. Through this dialogue of presence and disappearance, Frier captures the quiet
strength that emerges from vulnerability.

Juanita Frier
In a campaign focused on awareness, empathy, and support, Sublime becomes a symbolic space for
collective healing. It gives voice to what is often left unspoken: the silent strength, the quiet gratitude, the
internal chaos, and the profound beauty that can emerge from life-altering moments.
Juanita Frier ’s work is not just a representation; it ’s a recognition. Of those who have fought, those still fighting,
and those who stand in solidarity. It reminds us that there is art in survival, and in every scar lies a story worth
honoring.

Rika Senekal
Senekal describes painting as a way to be completely in the moment, to create without hesitation or restraint.
Through abstraction, she finds the freedom to express herself more intensely, to let the canvas hold what
cannot be contained in words. Her surfaces reveal a dialogue between control and surrender, discipline, play,
vulnerability and strength.

Faye Spencer
In this piece, Spencer turns her gaze toward the journey of breast cancer, honouring the courage it takes
to endure such life-altering experiences. The work acknowledges the upheaval of diagnosis and treatm ent
and the moments of fear, vulnerability, and uncertainty, yet it refuses to rest there. Instead, it shines a light on
resilience, on the hope that carries people forward, and on the healing power found in friendship, family, and
community.

Magda van der Vloed
The Blooming Season reflects the strength and fragility of those navigate ng the journey of breast cancer. Just as
flowers shed their petals in winter yet return in spring , so too do people endure moments of loss, change, and
vulnerability before blooming again with renewed life. This cycle of withering and renewal speaks to resilience,
the quiet promise that even in the hardest seasons, strength continues to grow.

Magda van der Vloed
The second painting, Slay, speaks with striking immediacy. At its Centre lies a bleeding wound , unflinching in
its portrayal of both physical and emotional trauma. It reflects the deep scars left by illness , not just on the
body, but on the psyche, the spirit, and the daily rhythms of life. Yet within its visceral honesty, the work holds
something more than pain. It carries the fierce determination to face the unfaceable, to name and own the
wound rather than hide it, and in doing so, to reclaim agency from the silence that so often surrounds illness.


