Chantal Westby

Chantal Westby Visual artist & multi medium abstract painter
Artist Environmental Activist. Carl Sagan. Her artistic approach is in perfect harmony with the story of her life.

BIO

"The nature of life on Earth and the search for life elsewhere are two sides of the same question - the search for who we are." Chantal Westby is a French-American visual artist born in northern France. From her childhood lived in a very modest and strict environment, she preserved the treasures and emotions of her imaginary escapades nourished by the stories of her late soldier father who s

erved in Indochina and was affected like many by the war, but also by the refinement of the Asian way of life. Inspired by these dreamlike childhood journeys, she spent her life building, shaping and embellishing her daily environment by using all the resources she could find around her. Gifted with a strong sensitivity and an innate creativity, she has always known how to brighten her world and that of others. Her spirit, her vivacity, her passion for life, her empathy for others have shaped a unique, complex and complete personality. It all starts with an observation, an idea, a questioning. There begins the journey where spirituality, light, mystery and the power of convictions are fused. She uses Art as a language, for which she builds, she embellishes, she suggests, she questions, she expresses. The richness of every aspect of the universe is her inspiration. She creates a world made of imagination, intuition and energy while evoking peace and lightness with a touch of reality. Chantal Westby's life could be divided into two distinct parts, the French and the American one, both separated by an ocean but connected by Art. Graduated from the Chambre Syndicale de la Haute Couture in Paris, her fashion design career allowed her to express her first artistic emotions through textiles. Refusing codes and limits, she quickly began to recycle and integrate other materials into her creations. A personal event brutally put an end to her career and her French life. After moving to the United States at the end of the 80's, the expression of her creativity would take shape in the complete interior design of her home, for which she would make it a point of honor to use and reinvent old furniture and objects found at flea markets to give them a second life inspired by the Empire style. This sumptuous decor was published in various interior design magazines. With this first American work completed and in need of a new artistic expression, she decided to expand her technique and studied art and painting at the PAFA (Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts). Since then, she has continued to expand her technique through increasingly larger works, integrating new mediums to eventually create true sculptures today. Of all those times and productions, only one of them, inherited from her father's Asian narrations, has remained with her: ink. Pure, diluted, pigmented or dried, it is used in almost all of her creations. Her history and that of her entourage have led to affinities with tangible creative themes such as global warming, space conquest and the resulting pollution, as well as mystical themes such as the journey of souls or the origin of life, which invite us to question much wider issues. Since 2017 and her encounter with the French multimedia artist and photographer Lénaïc G. Mercier, they combine their two worlds to create immersive and interactive installations on these themes. Driven like any human being by her doubts and contradictions, she now devotes a large part of her work to educating and awakening consciousness. "I feel that the impact of my daily actions, which I try to be as small as possible, versus the reality of the current planet’s situation is a real struggle for me. The immaculate figurative portrayal of consumerist abundance in my artwork contrasts with reality. Our planet is dying under the burden of humanity's actions and waste. My work as an artist takes on its full meaning, if I can humbly convince and sensibilize even one person to understand that our earth is being abused and that we must do all in our power to preserve it." Active in the community as well, she supports various foundations and NGOs such as From Here to Haiti and Life Project 4 Youth. She lives and works in Philadelphia. VISION / STATEMENT
For years now, I have dedicated my art to awaken, evoke, stimulate, surprise and sometimes educate. My work is addressed to the largest possible number of people and is accessible to art lovers as well as to the non-initiated. My artworks are imagined and created to be vectors of emotions; they challenge and I try through them, humbly, to awaken consciences to the current and future upheavals of our planet. Mostly dominated with white, and sometimes colored, my creations are now coming to life in 3 dimensions. They evoke nature, beauty and the energy of the universe but also humanity's excesses and its harmful consequences. The Light is always present through the dilution of inks and natural pigments that create mysterious auroras. I also like working with mixed media to reach new dimensions and give life to the fantasy. My inspirations are so wide that I keep a kind of moodboard made up of different materials, photographs, multiple artworks, music and texts that inspire me and challenge me. I recycle, I collect and I store objects, until these elements find their natural place in a work of art. My freedom of creation is vital, my process is extremely spontaneous and intuitive. A piece of work, painted or sculpted, usually appears very clearly to me as a vision while I am already in the midst of creating. I have one golden rule in mind: never forbid myself anything, whatever the dream might be. The technical process to realize this project becomes clear in my head during the following night. Obviously, I sometimes face obstacles, the feasibility is not always crystal clear, but my thirst to learn and work allows me to find the solutions. Challenge is a friend that supports and motivates me.

Museum Spotlight AnnouncementJune 20-August 2, 2026: beneath this historic roof, I step into the light to honor 250 year...
06/03/2026

Museum Spotlight Announcement
June 20-August 2, 2026: beneath this historic roof, I step into the light to honor 250 years of wonder.
In this moment, surrounded by centuries of stories, I make my presence known.
For 250 years the museum has spoken; I add my voice to its enduring chorus.
Thanks; I am very deeply touched.

More to follow

A hymn for the deep and a call for   laws that protect the   from warfare,  , and   collapse.My Artist’s Statement Adden...
06/02/2026

A hymn for the deep and a call for laws that protect the from warfare, , and collapse.

My Artist’s Statement Addendum: , , and the

The current confrontation in the Middle East including Iran’s targeting of commercial vessels, has exposed a terrifying truth about our global dependence on . More than 400 fuel‑laden ships and an estimated 2,000 sailors have been stranded or rerouted across dangerous waters, according to multiple . Many crews have been pushed to the edge: running low on food and water, cut off from their for months, and forced into a conflict they never chose.
These are workers trapped in a struggle created by poor negotiation, escalating retaliation, and an system built on and vulnerability.
This is not only a crisis.

It is a new kind of war, a .
Every tanker becomes a target.
Every sailor becomes collateral.
Every ocean becomes a .

And when a fuel carrier is struck, the ocean absorbs the wound.
, already suffering from , , , and -seamining, cannot endure another era of -fuel warfare. A single damaged can release more pollution than entire nations do in a year. The ocean cannot keep paying the price for our dependence.

We all know this.
We all agree.
The must change.
The ocean must be .

Definitely finished, nothing else to say!Tectonic HymnSize: 15" x 60" x 10 panelsMedium: Ink/Minerals and Varnish on can...
05/30/2026

Definitely finished, nothing else to say!
Tectonic Hymn
Size: 15" x 60" x 10 panels
Medium: Ink/Minerals and Varnish on canvas
Tectonic Hymn emerges from my deep concern for the unseen worlds beneath us, those vast, fragile that live in the bottommost layers of our .

As I painted, I kept returning to the tension between wonder and extraction. The dark, mineral form suspended above the luminous became, for me, both a and a warning. Its golden flecks echo the rare elements now sought through -seamining, a practice that promises minerals for yet risks irreversible harm to life we barely understand.

My research into deep-sea mining has been both inspiring and unsettling. The is clear: extracting cobalt, nickel, and other critical minerals from the ocean floor could disrupt ancient habitats, stir toxic sediment plumes, and silence that have evolved over millions of years. These abyssal plains are not empty; they are living archives of our ’s memory. Painting them felt like listening to something sacred.

With “ Hymn,” I wanted to honor that silence, that pressure, that slow breath. This work is my way of asking us to pause before we mine what we cannot replace. It is a hymn for the deep, a gesture of reverence for the that thrives in , and a reminder that our
above and below are bound to the same precious .

Picture by Dr. George Westby.
Website: https://www.chantalwestby.com/paintings...

Reflections on our Endangered EnvironmentPhiladelphia Ethical SocietyThursday, May 21 • 5:30–7:30 PMHonored to join Refl...
05/16/2026

Reflections on our Endangered Environment
Philadelphia Ethical Society
Thursday, May 21 • 5:30–7:30 PM

Honored to join Reflections on our Endangered Environment, an exhibition supporting the Clean Air Council’s essential work for clean air and healthy communities. At a moment when environmental protections face real pressure, staying engaged and united matters more than ever.

Tickets are available now.
https://www.eventbrite.com/.../reflections-on-our...

Alongside remarkable Philadelphia artists, I’m donating my work to help raise funds for this vital mission. Deep thanks to curator Cynthia Haveson Veloric, PhD, for her vision and dedication.
Art can awaken responsibility. Art can move people to act.
Proud to be part of this collective effort.

Painting: Ink and gold on canvas 36 inches x 48 inches

Meet the artists:
Nancy Agatii • Diane Burko • Julia Clift • Talia Greene • Yvonne Love • Deirdre Murphy • Amie Potsic • Rebecca Rutstein • Hiro Sakaguchi • Simone Spicer • Cindy Stockton Moore • Chantal Westby See less

04/30/2026
I couldn’t resist sharing this small but powerful   clip.In just a few seconds, it reminds us how urgently we need to ca...
04/29/2026

I couldn’t resist sharing this small but powerful clip.
In just a few seconds, it reminds us how urgently we need to care for our its wildlife, its , its fragile . It’s a gentle call to remember that we are not separate from . We belong to it. Every species has a purpose. Nothing is accidental. Everything is part of one i , living that depends on our .

But I also want to acknowledge something important.
This video was generated with AI a tool that, while extraordinary, comes with a real environmental cost. AI requires enormous amounts of and, increasingly, vast quantities of clean for cooling and . At a time when scarcity is becoming one of the defining challenges of our century, this contradiction is impossible to ignore.

So I share this clip with mixed feelings: admiration for its emotional clarity and concern for the hidden behind its creation.

It raises a deeper question for all of us:
How do we use responsibly without letting it replace the human effort, creativity, and care that true change requires?
Sometimes the simplest stories carry the most important , but the way we tell them matters too.

What are your thoughts? How do you stay mindful of your role in the ecosystem, especially in a world where even our digital tools consume the planet’s resources?

1 like. "Big Hands Save a Tiny World . ​​ "

Air, Water, Earth, and Fire36 × 36 in.  Mixed media on wood panel: acrylic paint, high glossThis work reflects on the el...
04/28/2026

Air, Water, Earth, and Fire
36 × 36 in.
Mixed media on wood panel: acrylic paint, high gloss

This work reflects on the elemental forces, air, water, earth, and fire that have sustained life since the beginning of human history. Once symbols of balance and renewal, these elements now bear the imprint of profound environmental strain. As planetary resources are depleted and ecosystems destabilized, the interdependence of the elements becomes increasingly fragile.

Through layered textures and luminous surfaces, the piece evokes both the resilience of nature and the consequences of human impact. It invites viewers to consider the shifting relationship between humanity and the natural world and to recognize that the preservation of these elemental systems is essential for our collective future.

Monstera LeafMixed media, 36"X48" Exhibition Wall Label "This work presents a Monstera leaf, a   plant often associated ...
04/20/2026

Monstera Leaf
Mixed media, 36"X48" Exhibition Wall Label
"This work presents a Monstera leaf, a plant often associated with abundance and vitality. Here, the artist reverses that expectation: the leaf is rendered in white, stripped of its natural color, resting on a cracked, wounded surface.
Through this contrast, the piece evokes the of tropical and the gradual erasure of their . The whiteness becomes a symbol of absence; the fissures, a record of the ’s injuries.
Together, they form a call to and an urgent reminder that the living world is disappearing before our eyes.

"Her work serves as a visual record of these explorations, inspired by visits to extreme around the world, from Haiti to the island's rainforests and coral reefs of Kauai, Costa Rica, The Redwoods, Bali, Vietnam, Puerto Rico, Japan, Taiwan, and Guadeloupe. Through her emotionally charged paintings, Chantal channels these experiences to ignite global solidarity in the fight to protect our shared .”

Artist’s Statement
"These images are my .
A tribute to the rain‑soaked leaves of Costa Rica and Kauai, to the resilience of Haiti, and to the sacred pulse of our wounded Earth.
I have walked through shaped like cathedrals, stood where rising waters erased paths and memories, glimpsed the shadow of the jaguar, and heard the fading whisper of wings.
This work is not simply photographic.
It is a .
It is a .
It is hope stitched with sorrow.
These images ask only one thing:
Feel. . .
They owe nothing to grants or institutions but everything to the sincerity of a path, my steps, my gaze, and the desire for a world where nature is recognized as kin, as family.

From Silence to Witness: A Photographic Journey Between Beauty and Warning
Album :
https://www.instagram.com/p/DL7WzcVuWUX/?img_index=1
https://www.instagram.com/p/DLzsp5CO2CQ/?img_index=1
https://www.instagram.com/p/DLr-tcHuWHc/?img_index=1
https://www.instagram.com/p/DLnCye2uOJv/?img_index=1
https://www.instagram.com/p/DLheftTuHiZ/?img_index=1
https://www.instagram.com/p/DLfAGQAu6AY/?img_index=3

Watching the Artemis II launch yesterday filled me with the same wonder that has guided my work for years, that ancient ...
04/09/2026

Watching the Artemis II launch yesterday filled me with the same wonder that has guided my work for years, that ancient pull toward the , the legends that shaped our imagination, and the human courage to reach beyond what once seemed impossible.

My Legendaire plaster sculptures were born from this fascination: a dialogue between and , between the first dreamers who looked up at the night sky and the astronauts who now carry that dream into reality. These reliefs are my own collection, a small celestial tablet that honors our shared cosmic story.

As Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover, Christina Koch, and Jeremy Hansen travel farther from than any humans in history, they remind us that exploration is not only an act of ambition but also an act of stewardship. Every image they send back of Earth rising and the ’s quiet surface is a mirror held up to our own fragile home.

Artemis II invites us to look outward with awe and inward with responsibility.
We must remember that our most urgent mission is here, on the only we have, even as we celebrate this extraordinary journey.

One home. One blue sanctuary suspended in the dark.
May the cosmos keep motivating us, and may that inspiration guide us to protect the Earth that makes all exploration possible.

Left side: WHEN WILL THE LAST HUMAN BEING BE BORN?  Center: Remain Rainforest, Echoes of Earth. the right side: Faith an...
04/07/2026

Left side: WHEN WILL THE LAST HUMAN BEING BE BORN?
Center: Remain Rainforest, Echoes of Earth.
the right side: Faith and Hope, N*I

Mixed media, 36 by 48 inches. Wood, canvas, acrylic, resin, a wooden cross with gold leaf, a metal sculpture, stone, a baby, a nest, a basket, and branches.

From the 2026 collection: THE OCEAN, THE EARTH, SPACE, AND HUMANITY.

A call to protect life, creation, and one another.
Faith as a compass. Responsibility as courage.

This work reflects my deep concern for our and for ’s role in its or destruction. It is a plea for respect, dignity, and moral responsibility, a reminder that our actions today shape the world we leave behind. We are interconnected, and the future depends on our choices.

Address

Westby & Mercier Studio 304/915 Spring Garden Street, Box 20/
Philadelphia, PA
19123

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 5pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Chantal Westby posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Share