In this paper, we reflect on our use of arts-based multiliteracies with French as a second language (FSL) teacher candidates in an initial Teacher Education (ITE) program as a means to express themselves as plurilingual language educators and reflect on their intended practice. We begin by describing the FSL teacher identity research context and theorizing the connection between meaning-making processes, arts-based multiliteracies and teacher identity development. Next, using samples of data collected in the context of a broader study on FSL teacher identity formation, we provide examples of the affordances of using arts-based approaches in ITE: accessing different types of knowledge, accessing different discourses that teachers engage with in the profession, identifying tensions and contradictions in teachers' beliefs systems, and de/re-constructing teachers' belief systems. Ultimately, an arts-based multiliteracies approach allowed us to engage with the multiplicity of discourses in teacher identity construction and promote agency, resiliency and well-being for future FSL teachers.