She began her artistic training in the UK, where she attended the Textile Design course (1978 - 1979) and the Foundation Course (1979 - 1980) at the Herefordshire College of Art & Design in St. Albans.
She began her artistic training in the UK, where she attended the Textile Design course (1978 - 1979) and the Foundation Course (1979 - 1980) at the Herefordshire College of Art & Design in St. Albans.
Sofia Areal is a Portuguese abstract artist known for her painting and drawing. Areal’s work also focuses on collage, textile design, and scenography. Besides painting and drawing, Areal's work also focuses on collage, textile design, and scenography.
Background
Areal was born in Lisbon in 1960, daughter of the painter António Areal and Maria Lira dos Passos Freitas Pereira. She is the second of four sisters. Born in a family context that privileged the arts and letters: the father, besides being a painter, wrote several essays, books on criticism and poetry. The mother, also an artist, has a course in sculpture and currently dedicates herself to drawing.
The paternal grandfather, Joaquim Santiago Areal e Silva, was an architect and, together with Jorge Segurado, was one of those responsible for the restoration of national monuments in the 1950s. In the maternal side of the family, from the island of Madeira, the great-grandfather and the grandmother, linked to the arts, had studied in England. Areal grew between Lisbon, Funchal, Azores, and Mozambique.
Education
Sofia began her artistic training in the UK, where she attended the Textile Design course (1978 - 1979) and the Foundation Course (1979 - 1980) at the Herefordshire College of Art & Design in St. Albans. Upon returning to Portugal, she attended, between 1981 and 1983, the painting and drawing workshops at AR.CO, in Lisbon. She was a student of Rogério Ribeiro, António Sena, and José Mouga. Besides painting and drawing, Areal develops her plastic research in the fields of illustration, graphic design and set design.
Sofia Areal started her training in England, taking the course in textile design and the foundation course at the Hertfordshire College of Art and Design, St Albans, before continuing her studies in Portugal at Ar.Co engraving and painting workshops in Lisbon. She has participated in collective exhibitions since 1982 and held individual exhibitions since 1990. In addition to paintings and drawings, she also works in illustration and scenography.
Areal’s research into forms and light brings painting and drawing into very close proximity where the dividing line mainly appears in the supporting material. Different techniques do not create rupture. Except for oil, acrylic (which she also uses on her canvases) is also involved in her work, in close association with colored pencils, India ink, watercolors, graphite and collage. While color is stronger in her painting, it is always present in her drawings, just as the textured lines of wax crayon or colored pencil also appear on her canvases.
In both forms, she searches for a spatial balance that is seen as a harmony between occupied and empty spaces, opacity and transparency within a graphic game of contrasts, what Sonia Delaunay called simultaneous. Indeed, her work and Areal’s share some significant similarities. Created using a vibrant palette dominated by shades of black, white, red, and yellow, combined with blues and greens, they create tension with the fragile lines that are superimposed on areas of color, turning the act of painting and drawing into means of writing and rewriting the world. Her work challenges it, records it and reworks it in bipolar form, bringing us face to face with primordial forces, safe within the maelstrom of her intuitive and immediate creative act, which makes it similar to the Surrealist way of creating.
Yet this quality does not eliminate the hesitations surrounding her artistic thinking. The format of the canvases also underlines her research into the ways of balancing night and day, Dionysus and Apollo, ranging from rectangles to circular tondos. The latter, cunningly fulfilling their function as targets, establish themselves as metaphors for the attention required by observing and creating. Indeed, apart from the material supports (which in the case of her drawings, are long sheets that already mimic the lined notebooks where people write), the backgrounds also act as a statement of energy, suggesting an Oriental-style precision of complements and completeness.
Moreover, the lines or the texture, which appear over these backgrounds in nervy veins whose dynamism is apparent in the funneling or increasing density that manages to metamorphose into areas, underline the presence of those forces and their necessary and wise fruition and effort. Although she presented her work in collective exhibitions throughout the 1980s, it was mainly from the invitation made by Alda Cortez to show at her gallery in 1990 that Areal started a regular dynamic in the public presentation of her works, which she has maintained until the present day.
Areal is represented in various institutional collections, among others José de Azeredo Perdigão Modern Art Centre of Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Casa da Cerca - Centro de Arte Contemporânea, Elvas Contemporary Art Museum, António Cachola Collection, MUDAS Contemporary Art Museum of Madeira, Novo Banco, Palmela City Counsil, Ponta Delgada City Counsil, Leal Rios Foundation.
In 2016 a documentary by Jorge Silva Melo, entitled “Sofia Areal: An Anti-Pain Practice” was premiered at the São Luíz National Theatre in Lisbon. The documentary focuses on Areal's work and work practice, mostly filmed in the artist's studio over six years. The film was co-production Artistas Unidos and RTP. In 2015, Jorge Silva Melo made a documentary about his own work, entitled, "We have not finished yet", which refers many of the artists Silva Melo has worked with throughout the years. Solveig Nordlung made in 2013 a five-episode documentary series about five different women, one of them Sofia Areal entitled "Talks in the hairdresser" for RTP. One of the other interviewees was Leonor Keil, who is one of Areal's sisters.
Areal's work has been subject to various analyses throughout her career, mostly in the press and in the catalogues of her exhibitions. Areal has also written in several occasions about her own work. In 2011, when of anthological the exhibition "YES" a book with texts by Emília Ferreira, Jorge Silva Melo, Luís Campos e Cunha with an interview by Ana Sousa Dias was published by Athena/Babel Publishers. In the same year, an interview was also published in "Portugal between generations: new reflexions about the future of the country" edited by Almerinda Romeira and also by Centauro. In 2013 Areal and Allan Hobson an American Emeritus Harvard Professor join texts and painting to launch a book titled "Creativity", published by ISPA.
Achievements
Sofia Areal is one of the most important Portuguese visual artists of her generation. She is greatly famous for her paintings "Untitled", "Serie 4x4", "Onduladamente V", and "Onduladamente IV."