Ray Caesar

Ray Caesar (born October 26, 1958) is an English digital surreal artist who lives and works in Toronto, Canada.

Early life

From 1977-80 he attended the Ontario College of Art, followed by 17 years working in the Art & Photography Department of the Hospital For Sick Children in Toronto, in their art therapy program.[1] Inspired by surrealists such as Frida Kahlo and Salvador Dalí, Caesar's experiences at the Children Hospital deeply influenced his artwork. Caesar said: "Working in a photography department in a Children's hospital is the act of chronicling everything from child abuse, re-constructive surgery, to the heroic children that deal with the hardship and challenges that life has to offer. I spent many years creating medical and research documentation, medical and technical drawings, images of huge equipment surrounding tiny premature infants and visual tools for brain-damaged children".[1]

From 1998 to 2001 he worked as a senior animator in GVFX, Toronto, where he mastered his skills in using 3D modelling software.

Artistic style

Ray Caesar's portraits frequently involve childlike creatures with physical deformities and grotesque elements set against a fairy tale backdrop of darkness and sexual innuendos. His works show intriguing scenarios that can attract and repel the viewer at the same time. In his creations he merges elements of decorative styles and architectural ages, mixing Art Decò, Victorian style and visual codes from the early 1900s, so that his creations stand out for their personality and charm.

Ray Caesar has become one of the most recognised representatives of pop surrealism and his haunting imagery is digitally created using 3D modelling software called Maya, mastered while working in digital animation for television and film industries from 1998-2001.[1][2] Absolute master of this digital technique he is a reference point to all the artists who face this artistic discipline. Through this program, he builds digital models with invisible skeletons and anatomical joints that can be bent and manipulated to assume any pose. He wraps the models in rich textures, adding hair, skin, eyelashes and fingernails. Then places them in digitally lit, impeccably detailed 3D environments built with architectural layers, windows, wallpapers, curtains and furnishings. Caesar’s meticulous process incorporates elements of drawing, painting, collage and sculpture, working countless hours to achieve every remarkably intricate tableau. Further emphasizing his sculptural technique, Caesar compares his process of 2D printmaking with imagery created in 3D as being similar to the practice of capturing stills from video and film. With full control over dressing, posing and lighting his figures as well as every element of their surroundings, Caesar’s craft is an advanced extension of a childhood obsession-playing with dolls. Fantasy, escapism, human cruelty and disguise are reoccurring themes explored within his dramatic narratives. Betraying the seemingly childlike innocence of the figures is their piercing, knowing gaze-exposing inner strength in contrast with their fragile physical appearance. Dark details manifest from deep within the artist’s vast imagination to define simulated realities, transporting the viewer into sanctuaries created for his lost ghost-children who emerge from shadows into safe refuge, carrying macabre secrets and hidden truths.[3]

Ray Caesar describes his process as "I begin by automatic drawing which is basically just letting your hand do first what your mind hasn't thought about. This evolves and I begin modelling in a 3D software called Maya pretty much the same way. I set the digital figure up for animation and I can move each finger and have a wide range of facial expressions, I do dynamic simulations of cloth and begin using curves to style hair. Lights and textures and 3D environments and referencing older models I built years ago come into the virtual space. I love that I can hide old letters and photographs in lockets and tuck them away into drawers that are closed. I know they are there and that seems important to me and I love that sometimes I forget they are there. In many ways working in a virtual environment is like being in a dissociative fugue or very deep daydream or in your very own playroom...you can get lost in there very easily. Somehow the piece just evolves into what it wants to be".[4]

Professional credits

In 1999, Caesar received a Primetime Emmy Nomination for Outstanding Special Visual Effects for his work on Total Recall 2070,[1][5] a Gemini Nomination for Special Effects and a Monitor Award for Special Effects in a series.

Cultural impact

Caesar's work has become popular amongst celebrities and fashion icons, such as Madonna, who collects his works and has claimed Ray Caesar is one of her favourite artists [6]

Riccardo Tisci of Givenchy[7] curated issue #8 of A Magazine, in which he featured artwork by Ray Caesar as a source of creative inspiration

Ray Caesar is frequently featured in Contemporary Art magazine Hi Fructose

Inspiration

Ray Caesar is inspired by French Genre artists such as Fragonard, Chardin, Francois Boucher, Jean-Baptiste Perronneau, as well as American realists such as George Tooker, Paul Cadmus and Edward Hopper and surrealists like Salvador Dalí and Joseph Cornell. He also mentioned he's inspired by Mary Cassat and Frida Kahlo.

Ray Caesar is also inspired by cinema directors such as Alfred Hitchcock, Yasujiro Ozu, The Coen Brothers and Tim Burton.

Exhibitions

Ray Caesar is represented by Gallery House in Toronto, Canada. His works have been shown in several international exhibitions.[8]

His most significant solo shows are listed below:

Bibliography

Personal life

Caesar, who was born in England and moved with his family to Canada in 1967, says that issues with his father contributed to the arrival of Harry, an "alternate," when he was 10. The boy is disguised as a girl in Caesar’s art, and remains present in his daily life as an alter ego. "Harry is beyond anger – he enjoys it," says Caesar. "My job is to keep Harry under control."

Caesar has discussed openly he suffers from Dissociative Identity Disorder and that witnessing things like child abuse, surgical reconstruction, mental illness, and animal research all had a deep effect on him.

Caesar is married to his wife Jane and lives in Toronto, Canada.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "PRESSKIT1". raycaesar.com. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
  2. "Ray Caesar, the Canadian artist who turned down Madonna". The Globe and Mail.
  3. "Ray Caesar. The Trouble with Angels". Wall Street International. Retrieved 2015-11-22.
  4. "In The Mind of Ray Caesar". Empty Lighthouse Music & Arts Magazine.
  5. "Ray Caesar". Television Academy.
  6. "Dorothy Circus Gallery". Dorothy Circus Gallery. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
  7. "Ray Caesar in A Magazine". jonathanlevinegallery.com. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
  8. "Exhibitions ‹ GALLERY HOUSE – Ray Caesar, Andre Fauteux, Gottfried Helnwein, Brian Richer, Carol Sutton, Selena Wong & Myron Zabol – Art Gallery Toronto". galleryhouse.ca. Retrieved 21 November 2015.
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