LIGHT OF HOPE

Verified Artist Certificate of Authenticity Included

Framing Options

A$530

Artwork Details

Medium Acrylic, Canvas, Ready to hang
Dimensions 60cm (W) x 80cm (H) x 3cm (D)
Review Stars 21,258 Customer Reviews
Original Artwork
This artwork is one of a kind!
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Estimated Delivery Time from TAS

Saturday, Jun 20 - Monday, Jun 22

Artwork Description

Impressed by today's terrible events in the World (24.02.2022), I finished one of my artworks.
This picture today fully reflects my state of mind and emotional state.
But the light of hope for the best has not yet died out.
This world needs a light of hope and faith in peace and love.

There is a real Tasmanian Lighthouse - IRON POT.
🌊The IRON POT Lighthouse is significant for several reasons.
It was the first lighthouse to be built in Tasmania and is the second oldest lighthouse ever built in Australia. It is also the oldest original tower in Australia and the first lighthouse in Australia to utilize a locally manufactured optical apparatus. It is also believed to be the first lighthouse to be converted to solar power in Australia.
The origin of the name Iron Pot continues to be a mystery. One theory is that whalers’ pots were left on the island from the early eighteenth century and this gave the island its name. Another is that it takes its name from the curiously formed pot-like holes in the island. And a third theory is that there was a whale oil-fired beacon in old whaler’s tri-pot.
The barren rocky island is small, about 0.4 hectares in area, and marks the entrance to the Derwent River.
The first beacon and signal station was manned by convicts and is believed to be on the nearby Betsy Island before being relocated to Iron Pot Island.

Artist Bio

Sofia Alba is a contemporary artist based on the east coast of Tasmania, Australia, where she has lived and worked since 2019. She spent many formative years in Taganrog, a Russian city with a deep artistic heritage, where she completed eight years of formal art school followed by five years of university study in traditional classical art and painting. This academic foundation continues to inform the clarity, discipline, and nuanced observation present in her work.

Sofia has been creating portraits since early childhood, beginning in kindergarten, and portraiture remains a core focus of her practice. Working across acrylic, oil, watercolor, and soft pastel, she explores a wide spectrum of textures and emotional registers, from delicate tonal transitions to expressive, layered surfaces.

Her artistic influences include classical masters and modern movements alike. Sofia draws particular inspiration from Ivan Aivazovsky’s treatment of light and sea, as well as from the sensitivity and immediacy of the Impressionists. These influences guide her growing interest in marine painting. She plans to devote significant time to creating historically informed seascapes featuring ships, drawing on archival photographs, maritime records, and contemporary coastal studies.

Sofia’s current work brings together portraiture, atmospheric Tasmanian landscapes, and a detailed exploration of natural light. Her paintings are characterised by calm tonalities, precision, and an intimate emotional presence. She blends classical European foundations with contemporary illustration influences and the serenity of Australia’s coastline.

Working from her studio on the Tasmanian coast, Sofia Alba creates art that unites classical training, lifelong dedication to portraiture, and a deepening commitment to maritime subjects, offering collectors pieces rooted in both tradition and personal vision.

Commissions

Sofia's studio is in St Helens, Tasmania