Stormie Mills
Stormie Mills (born 1969) is a street/visual artist operating out of Perth, Western Australia.[1] Mills' portfolio has been published in two books, Proximamente (2008) and Dwi Yma (2013).
Stormie Mills | |
---|---|
Born | 1969 (age 53–54) Colwyn Bay, Wales, UK |
Nationality | Australian |
Style | Street art |
Spouse | Melissa Lekias (married 2007–present) |
Website | stormiemills |
Life and career
Mills was born in 1969 in Colwyn Bay, a coastal town in northern Wales, and moved with his brothers Barnaby and Oliver and his parents Gani and Christopher to Perth, Western Australia when he was three.[2] In 1984 Mills discovered spray-paint and painting in the streets,[3][4] and at 16 years of age he travelled back to Wales to live with his grandmother before visiting New York in 1986.[2] During that time he also travelled to London.
When I went to New York in 1986, I met a bunch of guys that were subway painters and I saw the work of Jenny Holzer and John Fekner. These people were the godfathers of street art. They had a movement, and I was so impressed by them that it certainly changed the way I was thinking and steered my work into another direction.
— Stormie Mills[5]
Mills returned to Perth just before his 21st birthday.[2] In 1999 he held his first solo exhibition in Perth at Jacksue Gallery.[6]
In 2002 he achieved a Commendation Award in the "City of Perth Invitational Art Award".[7] He has been commissioned to create works in Los Angeles and London and in 2002 was invited to create large scale murals across Greece in preparation for the Olympics[8] achieving international acclaim for his work.[4][7]
In 2003 he was invited to produce a limited edition toy, Toy2R, which was retailed in Tokyo and New York.[7] He was also invited to produce work for a group show at the Adicolor Studios in Berlin and was invited to participate in group shows in Tokyo and Taiwan with the Seventh Letter in October 2006.
In October 2004 Mills was invited to participate in a show in London to launch the Thames and Hudson publication, Graffiti World, where he was invited as a guest speaker at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London.[7]
In 2009, together with Timid, Remi/Rough, System, Juice 126, Derm and Burial, Mills travelled to the west coast of Scotland to transform an abandoned village,[4][9] Polphail near Portavadie. Over four days the artists decorated the grey walls of the village. A short film, The Ghost Village, was made documenting the project and was screened at the London Film Festival.[4][9] In the same year his work was exhibited as part of Installation 5, presented by SCION LA at the annual Art Basel exhibition in Miami Beach, Florida, where he has been invited back twice.
The year 2012 saw Mills become the first Australian artist to create a street art suite at the Art Series Hotel Group's Cullen Hotel in Prahran Melbourne, joining international practitioners D*Face, Swoon and Blek le Rat.[10] Mills also presented at the agIdeas conference and in 2015 was subsequently invited by Conference Creator Ken Cato to be one of 25 artists to create an artwork to celebrate the conference's 25-year history.[11]
In July 2013 Mills was invited to paint works for Art Whino's Richmond Mural Project in Virginia, USA. Mills contributed a total of nine murals.[12] The same year he created a series of four metre tall pink bunny figurines for the annual Brisbane Festival,[13] which were reimagined by Mills the following year for the 2014 Brisbane Festival.[14] In 2015 the Bunnies appeared as part of the Perth Fringe Festival making appearances in and around the City, as well as at the international Sculptures By The Sea exhibition where Mills was awarded the People’s Choice Prize as voted by the public.[15]
In 2014 and 2015 Mills painted large scale murals for the Re.Discover project in Bunbury as well as FORM's #PUBLIC Street Art Festival, speaking at the inaugural #PUBLIC SYMPOSIUM.
Personal life
In 2007 Mills married Melissa Lekias, a public relations professional, in Oaxaca, Mexico.[16][17] In 2012, the couple purchased the Iwan Iwanoff-designed Marsala House for A$2.2 million.[18] In 2021, they bought Iwanoff's Golowin House for $3.2 million and sold Marsala House.[19]
Publications
- Mills, Stormie (2008). Proximamente. Magenta Group. ISBN 978-0-9804642-0-7.
- Mills, Stormie (2013). DWI YMA. Magenta Group.
References
- Babiolakis, Madeleine (28 September 2010). "From ghetto brick to gallery white". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 31 January 2012.
- Evans, Kathy (3 August 2011). "Streets Ahead". The Age. Retrieved 31 January 2012.
- "Writing on the wall". The West Australian. 17 January 2004. p. 6.
- Simpson, Alex (21 September 2011). "Stormie Mills". GQ Magazine Australia. Retrieved 31 January 2012.
- Dimasi, Rita. "Stormie Mills Graffiti World". Artshub. Metro Gallery. Retrieved 31 January 2012.
- Mills, Stormie. "Stormie First Solo Exhibition Installation". YouTube. Archived from the original on 21 December 2021. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
- "Stormie Wells solo show". PerthNow. The Sunday Times. 14 May 2007. Retrieved 31 January 2012.
- Osburn, Chris (July 2008). "Chris Osburn interviews Stormie Mills". Whitehot Magazine. Retrieved 31 January 2012.
- "The Ghostvillage Project". BBC Films. Retrieved 31 January 2012.
- Andersen, Fletcher (3 October 2012). "Stormie Mills @ The Cullen Hotel". Invurt.
- "25 Years of agIdeas".
- "2013 Richmond Mural Project". Art Whino. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
- Bochenski, Natalie (23 August 2013). "Brisbane festival installation art to breed like rabbits". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
- Atfield, Cameron (14 September 2014). "New undies for giant Brisbane Festival bunny". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
- Bevis, Stephen (22 March 2015). "Red flamingoes fly off with sculpture prize". The West Australian. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
- McRae, Ross (2 June 2012). "Dianella Disco House Sold". The West Australian. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- Caccetta, Wendy (17 June 2007). "Perth Confidential". News.com.au. Retrieved 12 April 2013.
- McRae, Ross (2 June 2012). "Dianella disco house sold". The West Australian. Retrieved 29 October 2021.
- Macdonald, Kim (1 December 2021). "Light up the dance floor, Disco House has sold". The West Australian. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
External links
- Official website
- Dawkins, Urszula (September 2009). Allegory in Smog: The Art of Stormie Mills. Art Monthly Australia. pp. 37–39. ISSN 1033-4025.
- Greenhill Galleries
- Filocamo, Andrew (30 June 2011). "Angel with a dirty face:Interview with artist Stormie Mills". Cream Magazine.
- "Interview with Stormie Mills". Artasy.com. Retrieved 31 January 2012.