Cécile Marche is the founder of LouiseM, an art business based in Singapore and France.
When Cécile’s husband was offered the role of COO at Singaporean pharmaceutical firm Hyphens Pharma in 2019, they decided to relocate, taking their two youngest children – sons, now 13 and 16 years old – with them.
Leaving her other three kids and elderly parents behind in France was not an easy decision, and her father unfortunately passed on in November 2020, amid a lockdown. But she knew it was an excellent opportunity for her sons to experience life overseas and be immersed in new cultures, something her older children had gone through a decade ago, when the family was based in the US.
Adjusting to life in Singapore was a breeze, Cécile says. The family had no trouble forming new connections and integrating into the community here, and while there is lots of local food to sample, it’s also easy to find French groceries here, everything from fish to cheese.
Pursuing her lifelong love of art
Though an engineer by training, Cécile decided to turn her lifelong love for painting and drawing into a business, launching LouiseM in 2010 – shortly after moving to the US – because opportunities to make art had arisen and she desired to have more flexible work hours.
LouiseM could be considered her sixth baby, especially since Louise was the name she had in mind for her 4th or 5th child, had they been girls. The business requires as much time and attention as a baby, if not much more, and her children know this, sometimes saying, “We’re not a family of seven. We’re eight!”
“The way I’m doing art is more like an art consultancy,” she explains. “I listen to the client, learn about their experiences and what they hope to capture, before creating a piece of art.”
While she used to customise backsplashes for kitchens in France, she realised that kitchens are rarely the heart of the home in Singapore, so she shifted her focus to making personalised wall hangings (e.g. encapsulating the cherished memories of a family in Singapore) and corporate commissions (e.g. a mural in the lobby that involves the contributions of staff members).