A woman with short hair and light and dark skin tones stands indoors, wearing a colorful scarf, a patterned jacket, jewelry, and red lipstick. She smiles gently and clasps her hands together, with abstract art and a marble wall in the background.

Artist Violeta Sofia’s Hand-Masters Series

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What does being “In Bloom” mean to Violeta Sofia?

"Ever since I started this project [Hand Masters], it’s been in bloom throughout my career.” 

Introduction
Ever since I started this project, like my  personal, it has been in bloom in my career. Hi,  
I'm Michael. Hi, I'm Michal. I'm Violeta Sofia,  and we're here today to discover Violeta's art.
Meet Violeta Sofia - Artist & Photographer
Tell us more about yourself. So my name is Violeta  Sofia. And I am an artist. I'm a photographer. I  
do fine art photography, which is my hands. Can  you tell us more about how your inspiration comes  
around? How did you think of combining the  different elements? The different elements?  
Living with Vitiligo & Finding Inspiration
So I started getting vitiligo when I was 19.  I think luckily for me, it was a time where  
or right before the time it became fashionable.  So people were asking me if people would find  
me on the streets and they'd be like, oh my God,  you're so cool, I want to take your pictures. But  
I didn't like the association of my skin condition  with being fashionable, so I never really allowed  
anyone to take my pictures, but I knew it needed  to be documented. So I started taking pictures  
at some point where my hands became completely  white, and I saw a picture of a man on a table  
with flowers. You can see everything. So I tried  to imitate him, but as I was progressing with the  
pictures, I thought it looked better without  my face in the pictures. And it was just about  
From Documentation to Self-Love & Healing
the hands. It was just about the beauty of the  hands. In the beginning it was just documented,  
but then it turned into loving myself, embracing  the change and the resilience. And then from there  
it has transformed into so many other things. But  initially it was just about creating something  
beautiful with what people think, that it's not so  beautiful. So you could say that your art became  
a form of a therapy for. Yes, definitely. What  role do the flowers play in it? So my hands are  
The Symbolism of Flowers in Her Art
actually flowers and the rest is added flowers  onto it. So you've got the shirt. So this one  
that hasn't got a shirt but some others have  shirts. And the shirt is like the vase. And  
then I wanted my hands to be the flowers and then  add more flowers into it. So that was the. And I  
love flowers and is a universal language. It's  obviously very challenging because you're in the  
pictures. Yeah, well you have to challenge the  pictures and you have to do the fixed events. So  
Behind the Scenes - Self-Photography Process
how do you go about this? Okay. When I start I  put a vase and then I do all the arrangement and  
take the pictures and see how it looks and  move move move move move. And when I have  
what I want then I put the shirts in, I have my  hands and then I hide. And the bigger the shirt,  
the better. So I hide under. But then the problem  comes because my hands are here. I have to bring  
them down. So I have my laptop there, I have an  iPad. I have my phone in between the. And I could  
trigger the camera. Yeah, yeah. From all of those  places. You should do some behind the scenes,  
right. So yeah, another way as well. So I could  be this is the less glamorous way. So I have my  
phone here. I could move my hands freely, but  then I will be pressing with my nose so I will  
be pressing with my tongue. Whatever I could find  just so it doesn't look very glamorous. But yeah,  
but it's challenging because also the shirt has  to sit in the right way. The flowers have to  
sit in the right way. The hands need to look like  they're holding something really light where the  
flowers are very heavy. That's why I was asking,  because I thought as well. But whenever you have  
elements like here, you know you've got your  floral tattoos, as we call them, we know how  
you photograph, how you should have you come up  with your ideas and then what happens afterwards.  
Fusion of Photography & Painting
So I do the pictures and so I print them. So  I do originals which is just one, and I print  
them on canvas, but then I paint on top of it. If  I do this just as a picture, a lot of people say,  
oh, it's not art because it's a picture. And  I was like, no, but I'm also an artist. I also  
paint. So where my photography ends, and that's  the limitation of what I want to do with the  
photography. Then I add another layer of texture.  It creates a little bit more confusion because  
even when it's just plain photography, people will  ask me, how is the AI? Is it a painting? Is it? So  
I was like, oh, let me make it. Yeah. Let me make  it more confusing. Let me have a fusion. Do you  
Cultural Influences - Africa, Spain & the UK
have a very diverse background? Yes. And you've  lived in different places and you've moved around.  
How that has helped you come up with all these  amazing works of art. And I will expand on this.  
How has this influenced your choice of colours and  vibrancy and saturation colours issues? So I think  
the colour is definitely. I like to think that  it's an African thing. So you need even growing  
up, if you were black, everyone in the family  would be like, no, you can't go out in black,  
no one died. You need to wear colours. All my  sisters is growing up in Spain. So it was all  
very traditional. It was all big castles  and valleys and very traditional approach.  
So the African is my background, my heritage.  Spain is my education. But when I go to the UK,  
I think that's what unleashed and gave me the  freedom. But when I came here, I was like, yes,  
you could do whatever you want. You could. And  even the education was a lot more open that would  
teach you about India. They would teach you about  Africa. They would teach you about Europe. And  
also you could do your own research. So I was then  able to start looking into female photographers,  
female artists, African and bring more of that.  And that was welcome, which I didn't have before.  
And I just enjoyed that, that I could pick what I  want. So that's how well you produce great work.  
And obviously you're being noticed everywhere.  Yeah. Ah that's good. Yes. So how do you feel? You  
Career in Bloom - Growth & Recognition
and your art are in bloom at the moment. So I feel  that. I mean, I'm not trying to sound, but I feel  
like ever since I started this project, like my  personal, it has always it has been in bloom in my  
career, if that makes sense. It has. As soon as I  start that, there was a really good reception. So  
it keeps blooming all the time. It keeps changing  all the time, and I get to share more of me. And  
it also I get my healing through it. For everyone  watching the video, this is actually one of the  
The Floral Tattoo Collaboration Project
projects we worked on together with Violeta. This  was some time ago and there will be more of this  
to come to. Yeah, I hope so, yeah. When we first  met together, we had just a casual chat and let's  
do a project together. We had a discussion. We  obviously loved your work. We found it really  
beautiful and very magical to us as well. We  discussed your hands at that time as well,  
and that was essentially the source of inspiration  of creating the floral tattoos. The idea behind  
this was to make your hands alive, so give them  even more life. You're holding beautiful living  
bouquets in your hands, beautiful arrangements. We  thought of bringing this element and let it crawl  
up and let it elaborate further on it. On this  concept of your hands, replace a vase, but in  
this case it was more about your hands being also  a vessel or support for these little flowers that  
could normally not be celebrated in a way that  the roses are celebrated. Yes. So it was a way to  
give them that support, to give them like a base  where we can see them and we can appreciate their  
beauty. Mhm. Similar to these flower tattoos that  we've done for you today. It's the same idea that  
I discussed earlier. So it's celebrating these  little shapes and forms. Every single flower,  
every single stem has to be glued individually.  Yes. It's a very patient very time. Time and again  
it's like we discussed earlier. It's very time  sensitive because these flowers won't last. Now  
I want people to see my art. It's very limited  because I want to keep it quite the number,  
quite small. So I don't reproduce a  lot, but I do want people to see it.

About the speaker

Violeta Sofia

Award-winning artist, photographer, and activist Violeta Sofia transforms personal vulnerability into powerful visual storytelling. In this episode, we explore her intimate "Hand Masters" self-portrait collection - a series that documents her vitiligo skin condition and chronicles her profound journey toward self-acceptance. 

Born in Cameroon and raised in Spain, Violeta’s multicultural upbringing permeates her work with rich, cross-continental influences. The "Hand Masters" series places particular focus on her hands as extensions of the flowers she holds - a poetic interplay between body and bloom that challenges conventional beauty standards. 

We had the distinct privilege of collaborating with Sofia on one piece from this collection at our Blooming Haus studio in Battersea, London. Our contribution highlighted her hands as living canvases, creating delicate floral tattoos that contoured gracefully with her vitiligo-patterned skin. The result was a celebration of difference as artistry. 

Sofia's work has graced the walls of prestigious institutions including the National Portrait Gallery and Christie's, solidifying her place as a vital voice in contemporary photography and representation. 

“Initially it was about creating something beautiful with something that was ‘not-so-beautiful’. My hands, they are actually flowers! And the rest is added flowers. I love flowers, they’re a universal language!” 

In Bloom speaker works
In Bloom speaker works
In Bloom speaker works
In Bloom speaker works
In Bloom speaker works
In Bloom speaker works