Sofia Minson

Sofia Minson

Sofia Minson with oil painting "The Other Sister"
Born Auckland, New Zealand
Education Bachelor of Arts & Design
Known for Oil Painting, Street art
Awards 1st Prize Molly Morpeth Canaday Art Award 2005, 1st Prize Art Auckland Award 2005 & 2010, People's Choice Adam Portraiture Awards Christchurch 2012, Finalist Adam Portraiture Awards 2008, 2010 & 2012
Website newzealandartwork.com

Sofia Minson (born 1984) is a contemporary New Zealand oil painter of Māori (Ngati Porou), Swedish, English and Irish descent.

Her often large, finely detailed oil paintings depict the land, myths and people of Aotearoa (New Zealand), combining aspects of realism and surrealism. She also celebrates Asian, Pacific, Western and African cultural diversity through portraiture.

Life and career

Sofia Minson was born in Auckland, New Zealand and spent her childhood living in Samoa, New Zealand, China and Sri Lanka due to her father's engineering project management work.

In 2005, Minson won first prize in two New Zealand art awards – the Molly Morpeth Canaday Art Award with her piece entitled "Saffron Monk" and the ART Auckland Award with her mythological Maori artwork "The Separation of Rangi and Papa". She graduated with a BDes degree in Spatial Design from Auckland University of Technology in 2006 and in 2010 Minson won the ART Auckland Awards for a second time. She has been a three-time finalist in the Adam Portraiture Award, in 2008 with her mystical landscape/portrait painting "From Hikurangi to Hibernia", in 2010 with her surreal self-portrait "Effulgent Self" and in 2012 with her 2-metre-wide black and white portrait "The Other Sister". In September 2010 Sofia judged the North Shore City Art Awards alongside art advisor, curator and author Liz Caughey and sculptor Jeff Thompson.

She has exhibited extensively throughout New Zealand from 2004 onwards and in 2006 was invited to show her works at the museum at Estense Castle, Ferrara, Italy and in Chelsea, New York. Minson's first solo exhibition entitled "Te Here Tangata – The Rope of Mankind" was held in Auckland in October 2007 and featured 14 large-scale portraits and landscapes referencing her mixed heritage and Maori myths. The artist has subsequently had solo exhibitions at the Gallery Helena Bay Hill in Northland, Erenus Art Gallery in Ankara, Turkey, Toi o Tahuna Gallery in Queenstown, McCarthy Gallery in Auckland, Red Spot Gallery in Rotorua and Parnell Gallery in Auckland.

Contemporary Maori oil portraits

Embarking on a Contemporary Maori Oil Portrait series in 2011, Minson has since painted prominent figures in Maori culture such as activist Tame Iti, musicians Tiki Taane and Stan Walker, Ta Moko artist Turumakina Duley and social anthropologist Dame Joan Metge. The portrait of Metge was commissioned by the New Zealand Portrait Gallery for the Makers of Modern New Zealand 1930–1990 exhibition and is now part of their permanent collection.

Street art / urban paste-up

The once traditional oil painter was invited to do her first public piece of street art in November 2012 when Newmarket Business Association commissioned Sofia to do a 9 x 15 metre wheatpaste of a print of her painting of musician Tiki Taane with full-face moko (traditional Maori tattoo) on a wall in the heart of Auckland's most exclusive retail district.

Canvassing The Treaty documentary

Minson and five other New Zealand artists were chosen for a collaborative arts project that was filmed for a 112-hour documentary called Canvassing the Treaty, which aired on Maori TV on Waitangi Day 2010 and at the FIFO international film festival in 2011.[1]

The art and social experiment follows six New Zealand artists, three Maori and three non-Maori, as they gain deeper insights into the Treaty of Waitangi and create cross-cultural collaborative artworks during one weekend at Te Tii marae in Northland.

The six artists – Mike Davison, Samapeap Tarr, Sofia Minson, Kura Te Waru Rewiri, Dagmar Dyck and Chris Bryant – were mentored by two experienced treaty educators Moana Jackson and Ingrid Huygens.

Sofia Minson was paired with Samapeap Tarr, a graffiti artist of Cambodian and New Zealand heritage, and they created the collaborative painting "Te Pou Tuatahi".

Selected exhibitions

Awards

Notes

  1. Masters, Catherine (23 January 2010). "Both sides of the picture". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
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