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Pogus Caesar
Pogus Caesar is a British artist, television producer and director.
He was born in St Kitts, West Indies, and grew up in Birmingham,
England.
History
A self taught artist who took up painting seriously in his early
20's, following a series of short term jobs. His early work was
greatly influenced by French impressionist artist Georges-Pierre
Seurat, one of the foremost exponents of the pointillist technique.
Whilst Seurat built up his compositions from a multitude of tiny
coloured spots, Caesar developed his own technique by using simple
pens and ink; composing his paintings with thousands of tiny dots.
This minutely detailed use of a fountain pen means that even the
smaller works take several months to complete.
During the early 1980s Caesar became director of the West Midlands
Ethnic Minority Arts Service, the organisation promoted multicultural
arts regionally and nationally. Caesar was also the first Chairman
of Birmingham International Film & Television Festival. He has
also contributed to shows by black British artists including Into
the Open (1984) and Caribbean Expressions in Britain (1986).
During the late 1980's Caesar started working in British television
- originally as a journalist on Channel 4's "Black on Black"
then as producer and director of entertainment, sport and multi
cultural programmes for Central Television, Carlton Television and
BBC. Radio programmes include "Mr & Mrs Smith" B.R.M.B
Radio and "The Windrush E. Smith Show" BBC West Midlands.
In 1993 he formed his own production company, Windrush Productions.
His productions include I'm Black in Britain, Respect, Drumbeat
and the award winning multicultural series Xpress.
As a photographer and artist Caesar has worked in Spain, India,
South America and Sweden and Denmark. He has documented the artists,
musicians, poets and politicians that he met and with whom he collaborated
- including Stevie Wonder, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Paul Robeson
Jr. These and other images acquired by Mappin Art Gallery Sheffield,
Wolverhampton Art Gallery and Birmingham Museum and Art Gallery
represent important visual documents recording key figures in black
British history. Selected exhibitions include "Instamatic Views
of New York" National Museum of Film and Photography, Bradford
1986, "Into The Open" Mappin Art Gallery, Sheffield 1984,
"Break in the Seal" Herbert Art Gallery, Coventry 1988,
"Sharp Voices, Still Lives" Birmingham Museum and Art
Gallery 1990 "Vibes" Herbert Art Gallery, Coventry 2004
Throughout the years Pogus Caesar has provided support and development
for a host of educational and cultural initiatives throughout Birmingham
City and The Midlands regions.
Caesar's photographs and extensive archives documenting Birmingham
Black History is held in Birmingham Central Library Archives. He
has exhibited widely, his work held in public and private collections
in Britain, Europe and USA. OOM Gallery a Birmingham based gallery
represents Caesar's work worldwide. Their archives include Caesar's
extensive photographic record of the Handsworth riots of 1985 and
the redevelopment of the Birmingham Bull Ring 2000 - 2003. OOM also
showcases limited edition photomontages, films and has regular exhibitions.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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