Sofia Beca
An interview with Monika Gass
I ’ve known your work for many years, have seen your wall panels, in different colours and shapes, last time in Portugal at the AIC/IAC Congress 2024. How did you start to work this way?
It was all unconscious. The next thing I knew, I was in the art world. I studied ceramics for three years at the Soares dos Reis Art School, but ceramics never really interested me because it was so closely linked to industry. I was interested in photography! At the university, I didn’t want to pursue sculpture because photography was calling out to me, but I ended up not going to any courses, photography was private and there was no money to pay for the course. So, I set up my studio at my parents’ house. When I took an intensive course in sculpture and ceramic murals with the sculptor Arcádio Blasco in Coimbra, I discovered another world, that clay is a material with which you can do almost everything. I did other specializations with Emilio Galassi, ES, spent time working with the master Arcadio Blasco and never stopped. I was hooked. I admit it, it’s my addiction.
Were you born as a creative person?
I never had any relatives connected to the arts, much less ceramics, so I didn‘t grow up in that world, and perhaps that’s why I never felt like I fit in with the so-called “normal” world.