Collection

Charles Long - Pedro's Bluff, 1999

Pedro’s Bluff

CATEGORY:
YEAR:
1999
MEDIUM:
Acrylic on masonite
SIZE:
25 x 36 in.

This piece shows the ironshore bluff at Pedro’s Castle, Savannah, near where Long lives and works. Known for his simplified decorative style, often wrongly described as naïve, he deliberately flattens his subject matter and uses a vibrant monochromatic palette. Long’s subject choice reflects day-to-day life in Cayman, showcasing the Islands’ local flora, street life, and everyday activities.

About the Artist
Charles Long

b. 1948

Born in West Africa, Charles Long grew up in Swaziland and England, where he attended Farnham School of Art. He settled in the Cayman Islands in the late 1960s and became a founding member and first secretary of the Visual Art Society. Long has been dubbed a “chronicler of our times”, a phrase that became the title of a 2002 retrospective of his work at NGCI. Other key exhibitions include the Santo Domingo Biennale (2003) and Carifesta X in Guyana (2008). Long’s highly collectable work forms part of the permanent collections of NGCI and the Cayman Islands National Museum. NGCI exhibitions include the solo show Charles Long – Chronicler of Our Time (2002), Portrait of an Artist (2003), All Access (2015), Mediating Self (2017), Tropical Visions (2019), and Island of Women: Life at Home During our Maritime Years (2020).