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Life
Some paths are linear. Others are collages.
Ayesha McGowan’s journey into professional road cycling was never about following a prescribed route. She taught herself how to ride a bike in her grandparents’ garage out of curiosity and grit.
Ayesha McGowan and friends ride in Girona Spain

“That’s just how my brain works. I’ll get these ideas, then decide to do them. If the idea isn’t big or scary, it’s not interesting to me.”

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Before World Tour pelotons, Ayesha raced alley cats—scavenger hunts on bikes that reward instinct and creativity. Cycling found Ayesha in the right place at the right time, but as she rose to the top, she noticed what was missing. She didn’t see diversity represented fairly.

Ayesha and Alicia searching for art supplies in Girona

“It’s not a lack of talent. It’s a lack of access, resources and information,” she explains. Chasing this dream became about more than just racing. It was an opportunity to create representation in a space that needed it.

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Now based in Girona, Spain, Ayesha was the first African American woman to compete at the World Tour level. While racing, she sees lots of color. Jerseys, helmets, the constant ebb and flow of what’s happening and how people are reacting. Green, her favorite color, feels right at home.

Artist and herbalist Alicia Fairclough met Ayesha in Boston years ago and now lives in São Paulo, Brazil. She views Ayesha’s story as beautifully non-linear, as Ayesha took so many paths to get where she is today. It’s why collage was the perfect metaphor—assembling various materials into something stronger, more resilient and totally unique.

Alicia Fairclough works on Collage in a dark studio

Through Thee Abundance Project, Ayesha extends that canvas, developing pathways for other women of color to enter the cycling world and find where they belong. “You took the sport everywhere,” Alicia tells her. Ayesha’s story doesn’t look like anyone else’s, and that’s why it matters.

The Final Piece

The final art piece
Ayesha McGowan and Alicia Fairclough

Episode 2

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Artist Bio


Alicia Fairclough is a Jamaican-American artist and community herbalist based in São Paulo, Brazil. She left a cookie-cutter life in the U.S. to pursue her creative and healing work, running a studio in a leafy corner of the city where she creates multidisciplinary artwork and hosts intimate plant-medicine workshops.

Ayesha and Alicia first met in Boston, Massachusetts, where Ayesha was refining her violin practice and discovering cycling, and Alicia was studying illustration and finding her creative voice. Years later, they reconnected through a shared commitment to living beyond convention and building lives on their own terms.

Other works

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Blank Canvas Series


In the Blank Canvas series, athletes collaborate with artists who inspire them to blur the lines between sport and art. Through this creative partnership, they transform raw passion and performance into something deeply personal and visually striking.

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