Preview
Description
Sophia Ionita (1933-2004) was a Romanian-American artist active in Paris, New York, and Miami. She is primarily known for her work in the visual arts through her inventive pyrography and her paintings, though she also had careers as an actress, linguist, writer, and teacher.
Throughout her career, she exhibited internationally in several major art centers including New York, Paris, Miami, Chicago, as well as in Canada. She graduated from the University of Drama and Cinematography, Ion Luca Caragiale, in Bucharest, and became well known in the area as an actress, the first major stage of her career.
She then relocated to Paris, in which she made the career-defining pivot to the visual arts and her signature medium. This began when she purchased a pyro engraving tool (appareil de pyrogravure) and subsequently took up pyrogravure, which she then innovated by adding color to the burned wood surfaces using different coloring techniques to create pyrogravure colorées. While in Paris, she exhibited at both the Salon Comparaison at Les Halles and the Hotel Commodore. She expanded her formats as she moved to the United States. One of her most memorable formats used in her pyrogravure is doors. Notably, one of her doors, titled The Door to Heaven, was selected by a curator at the Smithsonian to be shown at the Three Rivers Art Festival in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Ionita was also a pioneering participant in early efforts to capture, expose, and spread pyrographic artwork as a true medium of fine art on the internet in the 1990s, a time when there was barely any reference or information on pyrography available online. She did this primarily with the Woodcarvers Online Magazine, the E-Museum of Pyrographic Art,
as well as the poet Eric Boudet early website, and other projects that presented themselves as she embraced the new virtual medium.
She spent her final years in Miami, where she continued creating works until her death in 2004. Sophia Ionita had exhibited in New York’s prestigious Cavin-Morris Gallery and had a solo exhibition in Montserrat Contemporary Art Gallery in Chelsea. Her career was covered by Gallery & Studio Magazine, The Buffalo News, and Woodcarvers Online Magazine (WOM) among others.
Executed in 1992, this piece showcases her colorful pyrographic art style and intricate line work that evokes Romani, Indian, and 1960s and 70s imagery. She also employs several hallmarks seen throughout her work, including ambiguous forms with flowing and sometimes layered double imagery, as well as symbolic florals and eye forms.
As this year (2024) marks the 20th anniversary of her death, it is an ideal time to revisit her life and legacy, and her lifelong dedication and innovative approach to the unique art of pyrogravure.
Date Digital
9-20-2024
Date Original
1992
Format
pyroengraving with color on wood