Age, Biography and Wiki

Tanja Softić was born on 6 April, 1966 in Sarajevo, SFR Yugoslavia, is an Artist. Discover Tanja Softić's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is She in this year and how She spends money? Also learn how She earned most of networth at the age of 57 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation Artist
Age 58 years old
Zodiac Sign Aries
Born 6 April, 1966
Birthday 6 April
Birthplace Sarajevo, SFR Yugoslavia
Nationality

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 6 April. She is a member of famous Artist with the age 58 years old group.

Tanja Softić Height, Weight & Measurements

At 58 years old, Tanja Softić height not available right now. We will update Tanja Softić's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

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Dating & Relationship status

She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.

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Tanja Softić Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Tanja Softić worth at the age of 58 years old? Tanja Softić’s income source is mostly from being a successful Artist. She is from . We have estimated Tanja Softić's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
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Timeline

2016

2016: Gathered from Available Data, Chroma Projects, Charlottesville, Virginia.

2016: The Other: Nurturing a New Ecology in Printmaking, Museum of Contemporary Art, Jacksonville.

2015

2015: Catalogue of Silence: Sarajevo's Museums and Libraries, 20 Years After the War Muzej Književnosti i Pozorišne Umjetnosti Bosne i Hercegovine (Museum of Literature and Performing Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovine)International Education Center Gallery, University of Richmond, Virginia.

2015: New Works on Paper, Turchin Center for the Arts, Appalachian State University, Boone, North Carolina.

2015: Drawn from the McClung Museum, McClung Museum of Natural History and Culture, University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Re-riding History, The Crisp-Ellert Art Museum, Flagler College, St. Augustine, Florida. Wright Museum of Art, Beloit College, Beloit, Wisconsin The A.D. Gallery, University of North Carolina-Pembroke, Pembroke North Carolina All My Relations Gallery, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Fall 2015

2014

2014: Migrant Universe, University Museums, University of Richmond, Virginia.

2014: Circle Back, Mayer Gallery, Norfolk, Virginia.

2014: Migrant Universe, University Galleries, Tufts University, Medford, Massachusetts.

2014: Printwork 2013, Artist Image Resource, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

2013

During a 2013–2014 sabbatical from University of Richmond, Softić spent time in Sarajevo, photographing, researching, and interviewing staff at several cultural institutions that were either closed for lack of government funding or that operated under difficult conditions. She worked in the National Museum of Bosnia and Herzegovina, the National and University Library, the Museum of Literature and Performing Arts and the Museum of History, all suffering from wartime destruction and damage, by the exodus of professionals during the war, and by the lack of cultural support by the divided Bosnian government. This sojourn led to a photo-essay, Catalogue of Silence. In fall 2015, Softić organized a series of events, 20 Years After Srebrenica: Bosnia and Herzegovina Today at the University of Richmond, that commemorated anniversaries of both Srebrenica massacre and 1995 Dayton Peace Accords and brought to campus documentary filmmakers, poets, artists scholars and graphic designers from Bosnia and neighboring countries for a series of exhibitions, panel discussions, screenings and performances.

2013: Migrant Universe, Eleanor D. Wilson Museum, Hollins University, Roanoke, Virginia.

2013: Tanja Softic´: Works on Paper, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia.

2013: Deprintation: Art in Exile, Southern Graphics Conference, University of San Francisco, California.

2012

2012: Tanja Softic´: Recent Prints and Works on Paper, Walter Gropius Master Artist Exhibition Series, Huntington Museum of Art, Huntington, West Virginia.

2012: 4 Perspectives: Becoming MPA, curated by Deborah McLoud, Andrea Pollan, Sarah Tanguy and Nancy Sausser. McLean Project for the Arts, McLean, Virginia.

2012: Sargasso Sea Scrolls, a Collaborative Project, Washington Printmakers Gallery, Washington, D.C. Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute, Pembroke, Bermuda.

2011

2011: Migrant Universe, Halsey Institute for Contemporary Art, College of Charleston, South Carolina.

2011: Pattern Matters, Monash University, part of IMPACT7 International Interdisciplinary Print Conference, Victoria, Australia.

Shapiro, Gary, "Landscapes of Memory: Tanja Softić's Migrant Universe", catalog essay for Migrant Universe exhibition, Halsey Institute for Contemporary Art, College of Charleston, 2011.

2010

2010: Tamarind at 50, University of New Mexico Museum, Albuquerque, New Mexico.

2009

2009: China Sanbao International Printmaking Exhibition, Jingdezhen, China. Curated by Minna Resnick, Printmaker, Ithaca, New York and Jiangseng Li, President of the Jingdezhen Sanbao Ceramic Art Institute.

MATRIX/ Printmaking 2009, Florida State University Museum of Art, Tallahassee, Florida. Curated by Joe Sanders, Chair of the Art Department at FSU.

Leiby, Jeanne, "Tanja Softic´", Southern Review, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, Spring 2009.

Ryan, Dinah, "Tanja Softic´ and Holly Morrison at Page Bond Gallery", Art Papers, Atlanta, Georgia, Vol 33, #2, March–April issue, 2009.

Wurster, Lisa, "Artist in Exile", Artist Magazine, Cincinnati, Ohio, January/ February issue, 2009.

2008

2008: Printmaking Now, Strohl Gallery, Chautaqua Institution, Chautaqua, New York.

2007

From 2007 to 2012, Softić worked on a series of large works on paper, Migrant Universe, her most extensive body of work to date; an expansive visual poem about immigrant's identity and worldview: exile, longing, translation, and memory. This work poses questions of cultural identity or cultural belonging on an intellectual level while suggesting actual internal experience of what Edward Said called "the contrapuntal reality [of an exile]". At the same time, she served as a Chair of the Department of Art and Art History from 2009 to 2012.

2007: Inflorescence, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Steinhardt Conservatory Gallery, Brooklyn, New York.

2007: Works on Paper, Wexler Gallery, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

2007: Continuum: Innovative Prints from Pyramid Atlantic, 1992–2007, Pyramid Atlantic Gallery, Silver Spring, Maryland. Curated by Katherine L. Blood, Curator, Prints and Drawings Department, Library of Congress.

2006

2006: SCALE, A National Drawing Invitational, Tower Fine Arts Gallery, SUNY College at Brockport, New York. Four Printmakers (with Hung Liu, Karen Kunc, Renee Stout), Washington Printmakers Gallery, Washington, D.C. Curated by Katherine L. Blood, Curator of Prints, Library of Congress and Eric Denker, curator of Prints and Drawings, Corcoran Gallery.

2005

2005: Collaboration as a Medium: 25 Years of Pyramid Atlantic, Edison Gallery, Washington, D.C American Prints in Troubled Times, American University in Cairo, Egypt. Select III: Washington Project for the Arts/Corcoran Art Auction, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Curated by N. Elizabeth Schlatter, Associate Director, University of Richmond Museums, Virginia.

2004

2004: Recent Work, Lee Scarfone Gallery, University of Tampa, Florida.

2004: Graphia, Lamar Dodd School of Art, University of Georgia, Athens.

2004: Meridian/Meridien, Prints by Members of the One/Off Printmakers Group, Atelier Circulaire, Montreal, Canada. Sensory Experience Portfolio, Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, University of Nebraska, Lincoln. Botanical Imagery in Contemporary Prints, Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey. The Fourth Minnesota National Print Biennial, Catherine E. Nash Gallery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. Juried by Siri Engberg, Curator of Prints, Walker Art Center and Marjorie Devon, Director, Tamarind Institute for Lithography.

Biennial 2004, Peninsula Fine Arts Center, Newport News, Virginia. Juried by Carrie Przybilia, Curator of Contemporary Art, High Museum of Art, Atlanta.

Dawson, Jessica, "You are Here, Here and Here," The Washington Post, Washington, D.C. May 13, 2004.

2003

2003: Paintings and Prints, Sylvia Schmidt Gallery, New Orleans, Louisiana.

2003: Works on Paper, Art Gallery, The College of Saint Rose, Albany, New York.

2003: International Print Triennial – Kraków 2003, Contemporary Art Gallery––Palace of Art, Kraków, Poland (juried)

Brickman, David, "Dream Logic," Metroland, Albany, New York, November 13, 2003.

Temin, Christine, "Two Striking Exhibits Show the Power of Prints," The Boston Globe, Boston, Massachusetts, March 9, 2003.

Kinder, Elizabeth, "Bradley's Prime Prints," Peoria Journal-Star, Peoria, Illinois, March 5, 2003.

2002

2002: The 5th Kochi International Triennial Exhibition of Prints, Ino-cho Paper Museum, Kochi, Japan. Juried by Hisae Fujii, art critic, Tadayoshi Nakabayashi, Professor of Printmaking at Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music and Masanori Kagioka, Director of the Kochi Museum of Art. First Place Award for Architecture of Thought, an etching.

Nakabayoshi, Tadayoshi, "Exhibition Report: The 5th Kochi International Triennial Exhibition of Prints," TAMA Art Journal, Tokyo, Japan, March 2002.

2001

2001: Memory Folios, Virginia Center for Contemporary Art, Virginia Beach, Virginia.

2001: Kings, Hummingbirds and Monsters: Artist's Books at Evergren, Johns Hopkins University, Evergreen House, Baltimore, Maryland. Eighteen artists have been invited to each create an artist book based on one of the books from the Garrett Library at Evergreen House, one of rare book libraries at Johns Hopkins University by Cynthia Kelly, Curator of Exhibitions at Evergreen House.

McLeod, Deborah, "Tanja Softic at the Marsh Gallery," Art Papers, Atlanta, Georgia, Vol 25, #3, May–June issue, page 42, 2001.

2000

In 2000, Softić joined the Department of Art and Art History at the University of Richmond, where she is currently the Professor of Art. In the next twelve years, she has continued to develop work that addressed the relationships between images and processes of memory. In 2004–2005, Softić organized a year-long series of events at the University of Richmond titled Art, Hybridity and Contemporary Cosmopolitanism, which brought to campus artists and scholars like Homi Bhabha, Coco Fusco, Zarina and works by artists Rina Banerjee, Ellen Galagher, Wangechi Mutu and Mona Hatoum.

2000: Works on Paper, Marsh Gallery, University of Richmond, Richmond, Virginia.

2000: Memory Folios, Sarratt Gallery, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee.

2000: Prints, Kathy Caraccio Studio Gallery, New York.

2000: International Print Triennial, Cracow, Intergrafia – World Award Winners Gallery, Katowice, Poland (juried). The 5th Sapporo International Print Bienalle, Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art, Sapporo, Japan (juried). You Cannot Go Home Again: Exiled Artists in the United States, Philadelphia Arts Alliance, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (juried).

Schlegel, Amy Ingrid, "You Can't Go Home Again: The Art of Exile," NY Arts—International Edition, Volume 5, No. 2, 2000.

1999

1999: Tanja Softic´: Grafiche e Libri, Scuola Internazionali Grafica di Venezia, Venice Italy.

1999: Deutsche Internationale Grafik-Triennale Frechen, Kunstverein zu Frechen, Germany (juried).

Michael O'Sullivan, "Ten Best Shows of 1999," The Washington Post, Washington, D.C., December 24, 1999.

1998

1998: 1st Northern Ireland International Small Print Exhibition. Townhouse Gallery, Belfast, Northern Ireland (juried). Grafinnova Triennial of Prints and Drawings, Ostrobothnian Museum, Vaasa, Finland (juried). Bi-cultural Identities (with Hung Liu and Hoang Van Bui), Dunedin Fine Arts Center, Florida.

Allen, Lynne and McGibbon, Phyllis, The Best of Printmaking, Rockport Publishers Inc, 1998, Quarry Books, Gloucester, Massachusetts.

1997

1997: Body Politics, The Carroll Gallery, Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, Art Gallery. The University of Stellenbosh, Stellenbosh, South Africa.

1996

1996–97: Florida Visual Art Fellowship Exhibition. Terrace Gallery, City Hall, Orlando. Center for the Arts, Vero Beach. Florida Gulf Coast Center, Belleair. Walton Community College, Niceville. Key West Art & Historical Society, Key West, Florida (curated and shown in five venues around the state).

Southern Arts Federation/ National Endowment for the Arts 1996 Fellowship Exhibition. Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA), Winston-Salem, North Carolina (curated).

1996: The 3rd Sapporo International Print Bienalle, Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art, Sapporo, Japan (juried).

Cullum, Jerry, Southern Arts Federation/National Endowment for the Arts 1996 Visual Artist Fellowship Catalog, Southern Arts Federation, Atlanta, Georgia.

1995

Stewart, Laura. "Tanja Softic´ at the Cornell Fine Arts Museum," Art Papers, January 1995.

1994

1994: Tanja Softic, Painter and Printmaker, Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Rollins College, Winter Park, Florida

McGreevy, Linda. "Tanja Softic and the Dread of History," The SECAC Review, 1994.

1992

In 1992, Softić accepted the position of Assistant Professor of Art at Rollins College in Winter Park, Florida. In the following three years, she worked on printed and mixed-media books and large-scale drawings, all greatly influenced by following the disintegration of Yugoslavia and war in Bosnia, As her own outward identity was shifting from displaced Yugoslav to exiled Bosnian to U.S. immigrant, this series of books, prints and drawings addressed the deliberate destruction of cultural memory: the attacks on historic monuments and other material culture during that war, most notably the incineration of the National and University Library of Bosnia and Herzegovina in Sarajevo in August 1993. Returning to Sarajevo in 1996, seven months after signing of the Dayton Peace Accord, she witnessed the early stages of the city's physical reconstitution and the rehabilitation of its citizens' lives. This experience profoundly influenced her work: she developed new narrative and compositional methods that were influenced by the deconstructive and constructive forces of war, loss, fragmentation, and reconstruction. Her prints and drawings from this period were based on forms of seeds, crustaceans' shells and human and animal skeletal elements—metaphors for loss, survival and preservation. During the sabbatical in 1988–99, while conducting research for a public commission for the University of South Florida, she became intrigued by various concepts of memory in the mythology and literature of ancient Greece and Rome and the late Middle Ages. Of particular interest, was the method of speech memorization of Roman orators described by Cicero and the anonymous author of Ad Herrenium. Using this method, the speaker was trained to visualize delivery of a speech as a walk through a large building with many rooms around an atrium. Walking from room to room, the speaker claimed memorized ideas from the "loci", or memory triggers arranged carefully in each room (c.f. Frances B. Yates, The Art of Memory. The concept of creating a virtual interior space as a complex receptacle of memory, meaning, and images in the mnemonic process became relevant to her drawings, prints, and installations. Memory Folios, a series of six mural-sized drawings completed between 1998 and 2001.

1988

Tanja Softić was born in Sarajevo, former Yugoslavia, present-day Bosnia and Herzegovina. She is an alumna of Prva Gimnazija, noted humanities-based high school and graduated from Academy of Fine Arts at the University of Sarajevo with a degree in painting in 1988. Throughout her youth, she helped her parents catalog images: microscopy slides of human tissues for her father, Dr. Dževad Softić, a physician and Professor of Medicine at the University of Sarajevo, and stage set and costume designs or archival photographs for her mother, Slobodanka Grbić-Softić a theater scholar and curator at the Museum of Literature and Performing Arts in Sarajevo. While studying at the Academy of Fine Arts, she was taught by artists who rejected the social realism that marked their own education in favor of modernist explorations of the picture plane and form, yet remained committed to craftsmanship and local cultural influences. In 1989, Softić was awarded a College of Arts and Letters Graduate Scholarship in 1989 to enroll in the Graduate Program in Visual Studies at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia. Her graduate thesis, a series of figurative drawings and prints, explored the overlays of experiences of living independently for a first time in a very different cultural, social and academic environment and was greatly influenced by art history seminars on medieval manuscripts, the early history of printmaking and the history of photography. In the summers between the academic years, Softić apprenticed and later worked as a printer and studio assistant in the K. Caraccio Etching Studio in New York.