About

Nancy
There is a frequency beneath everything Nancy creates.
She is a Frequency Visual Artist, a powerful Healer, and a Strategic Transformational Mentor whose work spans two decades and refuses to be contained by a single discipline. Her entire being carries Transformation, and whatever she does is always guided by higher realms.
Her paintings offer transmissions.
Her pictures, light codes.
Her elixir shifts consciousness.
Her words open something in the reader that ordinary language cannot reach.
And yet, she has also advised business owners through the moments that mattered most. Developed strategy, implemented systems, and mentored founders through transformation at every level — inner and outer — because she has always understood that the two are never separate. For a business to thrive, its owner must embody the frequency of the vision they hold.
Her work, in all its forms
The sacred artwork comes from deep listening. Each piece carries an intentional frequency, made to do something in the space it inhabits and in the person who encounters it.
The Transmissions are channelled and immersive journeys designed to move you.
Temple of I, her luxury vibrational elixir, released in a limited edition of 111 bottles, is the distillation of years of working with frequencies to offer something truly unique.
Her books hold what cannot be said any other way: three poetry collections already in the world, a novel on its way, and an ebook in French for those who receive best in their mother tongue.
Her mentoring for those who come to her for guidance, whether they lead a business, want to learn to use energies, are rebuilding their life, or simply sense that something in them is ready to shift.
Nancy brings twenty years of real-world strategic experience, the depth of a lifelong healer and the creativity of a natural-born artist.

A Story
"The term Iwakapi is deeply intertwined with my personal story.
When I was around sixteen years old, I fell in love with Aboriginal art. I was not only captivated by its beauty, but also intrigued by the stories hidden behind the paintings.
I went on to study visual art at university, hoping to explore this fascination more deeply. However, at that time, information was scarce. The internet didn’t exist yet, and growing up in France meant I was far away from this culture we rarely heard about.
The images I found in books of people painting in the vastness of the desert spoke to something ancient within me. They awakened a profound call in my soul. I became determined to travel to Australia, to meet these people, to learn their stories, and to understand the meaning behind their art. It became a calling, one that shaped the entire trajectory of my life.
Little did I know that to truly understand Aboriginal art, I would have to immerse myself in Aboriginal spirituality and Law, a journey that would bring many initiations.
One of them happened in 2007, when I travelled to Australia and found myself lost in the desert of Western Australia.
One night, sitting under the vast sky, I broke down in tears, asking for help and guidance in my life. The millions of stars above me began to dance in the most magnificent display I had ever seen. There were so many stars that I felt myself dissolving into them, becoming one with the night sky.
Then, an Aboriginal tribe appeared before me and embraced me. They spoke to me in a language that was unfamiliar, yet somehow I understood it. When the vision faded, I felt peace wash over me.
That night marked the first time I consciously encountered Aboriginal ancestors in an out-of-body experience.
During another period of profound transition in my life, my Aboriginal ancestors came to me once again, and so began my initiation as a Tjarrtjurra, a shaman, a Medicine Woman in the tradition of a First Nation mob from the northwest of Australia.
Through this initiation, I learned to work with my healing power, to transform into the night sky, to use plants and ochres as medicine, to understand the Law, and to finally grasp the sacred meanings within the art.
At one point in this journey, I was crowned Iwakapi by my Aboriginal grandfather and the elder woman who was guiding me through women’s business.
Iwakapi means “to disidentify from identities to become part of the All.” It is a profound spiritual concept, one that carries immense depth and many initiations.
Iwakapi is that sacred space of transformation, a journey of dissolving into the All."
