
Bio
Fallon Dundas is a multidisciplinary artist, spiritual storyteller, and creative visionary behind Gutta Vitae—a fine art series and soul-rooted brand devoted to transformation through beauty.
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With a background in literature, social sciences, and community-led storytelling, Fallon’s work bridges ethereal aesthetic with grounded purpose. Her art—anchored in themes of feminine embodiment, emotional alchemy, and mythic memory—has been described as “intimate yet archetypal,” evoking both personal reflection and collective resonance.
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Her unique visual language blends digital design with intuitive symbolism, often using water as a metaphor for emotion, birth, and spiritual flow. The droplets she creates are not static—they are suspended moments of metamorphosis. Her work is often compared to visual prayer, designed to guide viewers into a deeper experience of self, soul, and sacred remembrance.
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Fallon’s pieces have begun making their way into curated spaces, online collections, and spiritual sanctuaries. She is currently expanding Gutta Vitae into multiple formats—including journals, ritual objects, and collaborative art drops—through both independent distribution and her Amazon storefront.
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She lives, creates and plants from California, where her son, her soil, and her spirit continue to teach her how to bloom with integrity.
Artist's Statement
Gutta Vitae is more than visual—it’s a channeling of unseen currents. Each droplet I create is a living meditation: a crystallization of grief, healing, femininity, and transformation suspended in glass and spirit.
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My work weaves together ancient symbolism, sacred ritual, and modern alchemy. It’s a response to the chaos of the world and a reclamation of beauty born from soul-level truth.
What may appear delicate—fluid forms, botanical elements, celestial textures—is often rooted in deep ancestral knowing or emotional excavation. I explore the relationship between what is hidden and what is held: how water remembers, how light bends through shadow, and how we carry lineage, loss, and longing through our bodies.
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These droplets are not simply aesthetic; they are vessels. Vessels for intention, vessels for emotion, vessels for whoever sees a reflection of themselves in the image.
Art, for me, is devotion. It is resistance to numbness and a return to presence.
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Every piece in Gutta Vitae is both an offering and an invitation—
To soften.
To remember.
To feel.
To rise.