Let $\Omega\subset\mathbb{R}^2$ be an open subset such that $\partial\Omega$ is a closed, simple curve.
I'm trying to find an example of an $u:\overline{\Omega}\to\mathbb{R}$ such that $\Sigma:=\text{graph}(u)$ is a minimal surface and, yet, there exists another minimal surface $\Sigma'$ with $\partial\Sigma'=\partial\Sigma$ and $\text{Area}(\Sigma')<\text{Area}(\Sigma)$.
Does such an example exist?
This is an excellent question. The answer is "no." The way to see this is via a calibration argument.
Background on Calibrations
The following theorem is due to F. Reese Harvey and H. Blaine Lawson (1982):
Proof: Using that $N$ is calibrated first, then Stokes' Theorem second, then the definition of calibration third, we have $$\text{Area}(N) = \int_{N} \varphi = \int_{N'} \varphi \leq \text{Area}(N'). \ \ \ \lozenge $$
Application: Graphical Minimal Surfaces in $\mathbb{R}^3$
Let $u \colon \overline{\Omega} \to \mathbb{R}$ be such that $\Sigma := \text{Graph}(u)$ is a minimal surface in $\mathbb{R}^3$. Regarding $\Sigma$ as the level set $\{v(x,y) = 0\}$, where $v(x,y) := z - u(x,y)$, we see that a unit normal vector field to $\Sigma$ is $$N_u = \frac{\nabla v}{\Vert \nabla v \Vert} = \frac{(-u_x, -u_y, 1)}{\sqrt{1 + (u_x)^2 + (u_y)^2}}.$$ Define the $2$-form $\varphi_u \in \Omega^2(\mathbb{R}^3)$ via $$\varphi_u(X,Y) = \det(X,Y, N_u) = (X \times Y) \cdot N_u.$$ The following exercise, together with the Fundamental Theorem above, gives the result: