Mogera is an uprising Sudanese Artist living in Khartum Studied fine Art painting at Sudan University for sciences and technology and participated in several activities, Exhibitions in Sudan:
– “Change”, Reminar Gallery, 2016
– “City”, Reminar Lounge, 2017
– Reminiar ‘Reflection’ 2018
– Anonymous Gallery, Reminir, 2020
– Anonymous Exhibition at Rashid Diab Center 2017
Solo Exhibitions:
– 2019 Aza Gallery Downtown Gallery
– Gallery Twenty-One, Downton Gallery, 2020
– Life Exhibition Exhibition by Jaiha Krona 2021
”History tells that during the deadly epidemic of the plague, which struck Europe in the 14th century, artists at that time faced this long illness by helping to inventive and fantasy of art. Many painters from Florence in Italy, recluded in their villages to face the plague through their imagination and artistic creativity. Seven centuries later, the Covd19 pandemic has succeeded in devalling its great artist skills, reinventing and transforming this bitter experience into impeccable artworks.
This is the case of the Sudanese artist Almogera Abdalbagea, who emulating the Florentine painters of the 14th century, has dumped all his lives and experiences experienced during the coronavirus pandemic, in his latest pictorial work. His recent collection of tables entitled “Twenty-One” (Twenty-one), referring to the beginning year, precisely the distress of the suffering, the economic and social precarities faced by the Sudanese people during the pandemic and the horizon of hope opened for a verifiably courageous and tenacious people”
Written by Javier Fernando Miranda Prieto