THE EQUATION FOR FREEDOM, PEACE AND EQUALITY

New mural on Holy Green, Sheffield UK


At the edge of Holy Green, where classrooms once stood and chalk dust once hung in the air, a mural blooms across the wall – a burst of colour, pattern, and quiet intent. Titled ‘The Equation for Freedom, Peace, and Equality’, it borrows from the French national motto, ‘Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité’, but leaves behind the weight of old hierarchies, exchanging “brotherhood” for a softer, more open word: peace.

The mural pulses with energy. Bright blues, deep reds, flashes of yellow and violet woven into geometric forms that seem at once organic and mathematical. There are echoes of molecules, of cells under a microscope, of unseen worlds made visible. These patterns speak to the artist’s background in science: molecular biology, microscopy, where beauty often hides in the smallest things.

But this is not a scientific diagram. It’s a kind of visual poem. Shapes flow into each other like ideas in conversation. Overlapping, evolving, never fixed. Like the values it names freedom, peace, equality, it resists simple answers.

Holy Green holds its own layers of memory. Once a place of learning, it now hosts this bold, quiet call to reflect, to question. There’s a whisper of a former French teacher here, eccentric and unforgettable, maybe still echoing in the walls. A shared nationality with the artist adds one more thread to the tapestry.

If there is an equation in this mural, it’s unfinished. Drafted in hope, not certainty, this work sketches the outline of a better world. And perhaps, just perhaps, if we can solve it and truly understand the balance it hints at, we might unlock the deeper formula for peace, freedom, and equality in the universe.

It doesn’t offer solutions. Just a space to imagine them.

THE EQUATION FOR FREEDOM, PEACE AND EQUALITY was funded by Atkinsons, Sheffield City council and produced with the help of Friends Of Sheffield City Centre. Photos and text © Florence Blanchard 2025

ALTERED STATES @ Saatchi gallery

Really excited to be part of this exhibition, which is opening this week at Saatchi gallery in London. For this occasion I prepared a few new paintings I’m super pleased with. Please message me if you’d like to attend the private view this Thursday.

Altered States

Altered States showcases works by eight urban contemporary artists based in the UK. The artists featured in Altered States are: D.A.N.T.E., David Shillinglaw, Florence Blanchard, Kid Acne, Lily Mixe, Skeleton Cardboard, Sr.X and Victoria Villasana. The exhibition has been curated by Olly Walker.

By its nature art concerns transition and transformation. Ideas and emotions transform from impulses to physical images. Substances are transformed when rendered on surfaces, liquids become solids and colours merge. Similarly, artists find themselves living within a society that is constantly changing and presenting them with new challenges and opportunities.

The UK is home to a community of diverse artists. Some were borne in the UK and others were drawn to it; but all continue to explore artistic ideas as the nation evolves. Altered States showcases the output of a selection of British-based urban contemporary artists working today.

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Art by Florence Blanchard

ARCADIA 100 x 150cm

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La Grand Arche Paris

Mural Art by Florence Blanchard

This summer I’ll be taking part in 2 interesting exhibitions: Adventures in Modern Abstraction at Stolen Space gallery in London, and This Will Ruin Everything at The Light House in Glasgow.

Last month I went to Paris to paint on the 19th floor of iconic building La Grande Arche. Pretty cool hollow cubic building from the late 80’s which is aligned with Champs Elysée, L’Arc de Triomphe and Le Louvre!DSC_1312_72DSC_1324_72

From wikipedia: ‘A great national design competition was launched in 1982 as the initiative of French president François Mitterrand. Danish architect Johann Otto von Spreckelsen (1929–1987) and Danish engineer Erik Reitzel designed the winning entry to be a late-20th-century version of the Arc de Triomphe: a monument to humanity and humanitarian ideals rather than military victories. La Grande Arche was inaugurated in July 1989, with grand military parades that marked the bicentennial of the French Revolution. It completed the line of monuments that forms the Axe historique running through Paris.’

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