Sophia Xeros-Constantinides
Born Melbourne, Victoria.
Sophia Xeros-Constantinides has been passionate about art since childhood. However, circumstances led her to pursue a career in medicine before finally being able to pursue her love of art. She explored botanical art with Diane Emery at the Botanical Gardens before enrolling in formal studies in Fine Art at Monash University, Caulfield. While there, she studied figurative and abstract painting and drawing, despite resistance from some tutors who believed that painting was dead.
Sophia was awarded an Australian Postgraduate Award in 2002 and began her Masters and PhD studies at Monash. Her postgraduate art-making was feminist in its orientation and inspired by her clinical work with new mothers and babies. In her PhD studio work, Sophia re-fashioned depictions of pregnant and birthing women using collage as a metaphor for the “un-doingness” of maternity. She continued her painting practice and made prints, including collagraph, soft-ground etchings, and photo-etchings.
Sophia believes that painting is another way of keeping a diary. Her transcription paintings of Guido Reni and Titian are evidence of her continued exploration and evolution as an artist.