Quote
I wish I could have normal girl thoughts
I wish I could have normal girl thoughts
Sofia is an Italian multi-disciplinary artist channeling her body as a medium to reshape perceptions of female representation.
She was born in Florence, surrounded by Renaissance art history and the sexual connotations carried over by the female body. At the age of 17 she moved to London, where her conservative upbringing blurred with the individualism and diversity of a multicultural hub.
In 2020 she received her Master in Fine Art from Central Saint Martins, and despite the challenges of that year, she received prizes and nominations for prestigious awards such as the Ingram Prize and the he GMTF 2021 Film Festival.
After 10 years working as a digital designer in London, she gave up her corporate life to pursue her artistic career. This led her to secure collaborations with international galleries and museums, where she exhibits alongside renowned artists like Jenny Holzer, Annie Leibovitz, Carole Feuerman, and Barbara Kruger, to name a few.
Her practice is greatly inspired by the 1970 feminist art movement, as well the cyberpunk literature theme and the relationship between humans and machines.
I am an Italian multidisciplinary artist based in the US, and I use my body
as both subject and medium to reshape perceptions of female identity in a
digital world. Growing up in Florence, immersed in Renaissance art, I was
constantly exposed to idealized portrayals of the female form. Coupled with
my family’s deep roots in the traditional fashion manufacturing industry,
these images fostered conflicting narratives about femininity, identity, and
self-worth. My conservative upbringing imposed ideals of behavior and
presentation, which I began challenging when I moved to London at 17.
There, a city defined by cultural diversity and individualism, I grappled
with societal standards of beauty and success. This journey toward self-
expression and self-discovery led me to question the intersection of
femininity, body commodification, and digital culture. The rise of social
media intensified this tension, turning the female body into both a tool and
a product—manipulated and consumed by the masses in a relentless cycle of
self-curation.
My artistic practice is informed by the feminist art movement of the 1970s,
where artists like Marina Abramovic, Valie Export, and Yoko Ono used their
bodies to reclaim agency over female representation. In a contemporary
digital landscape, my work seeks to recontextualize the female form,
addressing themes of identity manipulation, body commodification, and
societal expectations. Platforms like Instagram and TikTok, with their
decentralized imagery, have transformed identity into performance—governed by
algorithms and rewarded by likes. Women, particularly, are caught in the
crossroads of this visual economy, where beauty and desirability are
commodities constantly bought and sold.
In my paintings, I challenge distorted representations of women in media by
offering raw, unfiltered interpretations. Inspired by Yves Klein's
Anthropometries, I use my body to create imprints that reflect the tension
between vulnerability and power, deeply personal yet universally resonant.
Cyberpunk literature further influences my work, particularly themes of human
nature and dystopian reality, exploring the evolving relationship between
humans and machines. For example, works like 'Animal', and 'Glitch' question
evolutions blurred line, drawing from Donna Haraway’s A Cyborg Manifesto and
Yuval Noah Harari’s Homo Deus. This pieces examines our growing dependence on
technology and the shift of power, where the machines have become alive, and
humans are the still objects. In Hidden Identity, I interrogate the concept
of 'ghost in the shell, in other words - individual’s consciousness, shaped
by unseen algorithms and data systems that subtly dominate modern life.
Through my art, I aim to create a space for authentic self-expression,
confronting the contradictions of womanhood in the digital age. My work is a
dialogue between the personal and the collective, the human and the machine,
the past and the present.
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