The Artist Behind Sacred Muse
An intuitive journey through color, geometry, and presence.
Cathy’s process is intuitive and layered, using spray paint to build depth, atmosphere, and movement. The act of creating becomes a practice in letting go—less about perfection and more about presence. Her paintings invite the viewer to slow down, breathe, and return to the body—like a small, visual meditation in the midst of everyday life.
She is drawn to sacred geometry for both its beauty and its symbolism: a visual language reflecting universal order and interconnectedness. Some pieces also incorporate chakra-inspired elements as a gentle pathway inward. Many works are intentionally created without a single “right” orientation, encouraging collectors to trust their intuition and engage with the art in a personal, embodied way.
With a background in the healing field since 1998, Cathy is deeply attuned to what nourishes the nervous system—beauty that slows you down, stirs the imagination, and reconnects you to something greater: the cosmic, the collective, the mystery. Her work is an invitation to remember a slower rhythm of being, and to feel held by the spacious intelligence of life itself.
A Return to Presence Through Art
Cathy Jones is a Colorado-based artist whose work is inspired by the wild beauty of nature—clouds, luminous sunsets, mountain skies, outer space, and the sound and shimmer of water. As a child, she was the one lying on the ground finding images in the clouds, or seeing worlds emerge from textured walls and ceilings. Creativity was always present, though for years it lived quietly alongside other paths.
Her return to art came not through striving, but through noticing. Walking through her home one day, surrounded by objects she had made, Cathy paused and had a simple, life-shifting realization: I am an artist. Giving herself permission to step fully into that identity opened a creative portal—one that continues to guide her work today. Encouragement from mentors and friends affirmed what she felt intuitively: this work was meant to be shared.