
Jen Guidry is a contemporary artist and the founder of Stone & Soul Studio. Her work explores the balance between strength and stillness, structure and emotion. Each piece is created with intention, honoring both the physical materials and the deeper meaning they carry.
Shaped by a life of resilience, healing, and transformation, Jen’s art is grounded, textured, and deeply present. She focuses less on decoration and more on creating work that holds weight and feeling. Her pieces are meant to be experienced, not just observed.
Stone & Soul Studio was built on the belief that art can anchor a space and speak without words. Jen’s work often reflects contrast. Strength and softness. Movement and stillness. The visible and the unseen.
Her art is collected by those drawn to authenticity, depth, and timelessness. Each piece is created as a quiet conversation between stone and soul.
Her background is rooted in nervous system regulation, healing, and leadership. Through The High Level Life, her speaking work, and SA Pain Relief, Jen helps people come out of chronic stress and back into clarity and steadiness. That same awareness shapes her art. She pays attention to how environments affect the body and the mind, and she creates with that understanding.
She does not create in volume. She does not repeat work. Each piece reflects a moment of presence between her hands and the materials. Once it leaves the studio, it cannot be recreated.
Stone and Soul Studios is not a departure from her life’s work. It is its quiet center. A place where expression replaces pressure and meaning takes form without explanation.
People are often drawn to art long before they can explain why.
This work tends to resonate with people who value presence over excess. It’s not designed to impress or compete for attention. It exists to shift how a space feels and how a person experiences being in it.
Each piece is created with stone and natural materials chosen for their weight, texture, and history. These elements bring grounding into a space in a way that is subtle but consistent. Over time, that presence becomes noticeable. Not as decoration, but as atmosphere.
Many people hesitate to invest in art because they feel they need a reason. A justification. A story they can defend. This work doesn’t require that. It asks for recognition, not explanation. If something in it feels familiar or steady, that response is enough.
People choose this work because:
This art is made slowly and intentionally. No two pieces are repeated. When a work leaves the studio, it carries the state in which it was made. That presence cannot be reproduced.
Living with this work is not about ownership. It’s about relationship. The pieces become part of daily life, quietly influencing the tone of a room without demanding focus.
If you find yourself drawn to a piece, trust that response.
Art does not always need logic. Sometimes it simply needs to belong where it lands.
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