[3] In 1981, she left Fisk to work at the University of Maryland as an associate professor of printmaking, drawing, and papermaking.
[3] In 1982 she received the first of many CAPA awards from the University of Maryland, singled out for her advanced study in color etching techniques.
With a strong color sense, a preference for simple geometric (sometimes architectural) shapes and the technical ability to push the traditional boundaries of printmaking, Pogue created a body of work that was exhibited in museum, galleries, and universities nationally and internationally.
Pogue died at age 58 at the Mariner of Laurel health care facility on November 12, 2002, from cardiac arrest.
[7][6] 1971: "Flowers of Form", Studio Museum in Harlem (New York, NY)[9] 1971: "Contemporary Black Artists in America", Whitney Museum (New York, NY)[10] 1976: "Migraciones: Una Exhibición de Artistas Gráficos Afro-Americanos", La Tertulia Museum (Cali, Colombia)[11] 1981: "Forever free: art by African-American women, 1862-1980", Illinois State University (Normal, IL) [12] 1982: Clark College Woodruff Library (Atlanta, GA)[13] 1983: "International Print Exhibit", Taipei City Museum of Fine Arts (Taipei, Taiwan)[11] 1985: City Museum (Arondelovac)[11] 1987: "The Art of Black America in Japan: Afro-American Modernism" (Tokyo and Chiba, Japan)[11] 1988: "Black Women Artists: North Carolina Connections", North Carolina Central University (Durham, NC)[11] 1988: "Black Arts Festival Exhibition", Spelman College (Atlanta, GA)[11] 1989: Castle Gallery (Hyattsville, Maryland)[11] 2008: "Arabesque: The Art of Stephanie Pogue", Driskell Center, University of Maryland, College Park (College Park, MD)[8] 2011: "Sculpted, Etched and Cut - Metal Works from the Permanent Collection", Studio Museum in Harlem (New York, NY)[14] 2019: "Connected: African-American Female Artists and North Carolina", North Carolina Central University (Durham, NC)[15]