Tanja McMillan | |
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Born | Tanja Jade Thompson 1982 (age 41–42) Maryborough, Australia |
Nationality | Australia, New Zealand |
Known for | painting, drawing, sculpture |
Style | tattoo style, graffiti, kimo-kawaii |
Tanja Jade McMillan (born Tanja Jade Thompson, also Tanja Jade, and Misery 1982, Maryborough, Australia) is a graffiti artist, and painter of Tahitian and Chinese descent[1] best known as Misery, is currently based in Auckland, New Zealand.[2][3]
McMillan started painting as Misery since she was at Auckland Metropolitan College in 1997, where she became friends with fellow student, Elliot O'Donnell, best known as Askew, who given McMillan the name Misery.[2][1] In 2010, McMillan temporarily abandoned the name Misery at age 28 when she felt the brand Misery was consuming her,[4] by ceremonially auctioning off the last of the Misery works at Webb's auction house in Auckland.[2] McMillan has since reclaimed the name Misery and describes her style as kimo-kawaii, creepy and cute in Japanese.[5] Her husband is a well known New Zealand tattoo artist Tom McMillan, best known as Tom Tom.[6]
There are two bronze sculptures named Twist and Thief by McMillan on Karangahape Road, commissioned by Auckland Council, to be part of Auckland Council Art Collection in collaboration with John Oz.[7] McMillan have collaborated with many well known designers and brands, such as New Balance,[8] Blunt,[9] Bitra, Casio Baby-G, Telecom, Serato and Piaggio.[10]
McMillan has been shown extensively in New Zealand and internationally such as Berlin, Taiwan, Melbourne, Paris, Hawaii and Los Angeles.[11]