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Achuthan Kudallur
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For Achuthan Kudallur, painting was not a dialogue or conversation, but a communion with colour and sometimes, even a battle. From his early expressionist journeys he comes to this tranquil sense of joy in light and colour, of which one can see traces in his later abstract work - a better medium for self-expression to him. Kudallur was a formidable figure in the contemporary abstract art movement and highly revered in contemporary art circles in...
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For Achuthan Kudallur, painting was not a dialogue or conversation, but a communion with colour and sometimes, even a battle. From his early expressionist journeys he comes to this tranquil sense of joy in light and colour, of which one can see traces in his later abstract work - a better medium for self-expression to him. Kudallur was a formidable figure in the contemporary abstract art movement and highly revered in contemporary art circles in South India. His canvases throb and are alive with the joyous, riotous spreads of colour, at times melancholic, even tragic.
Born in 1945 in Kudallur village in Kerala, his work was deeply influenced by idyllic scenes from his childhood involving beaches, rivers, temple evenings and other bits from that childhood remembered. A civil engineer by training, Kudallur joined evening classes at the Madras Art Club in the Government College of Fine Arts.
Artist R B Bhaskaran, former chairman of the Lalit Kala Akademi and former principal of the Government College of Fine Arts, Chennai and Government College of Arts, Kumbakonam, who knew Kudallur as a student, an artist and a friend said, “I took still life classes at the Madras Art Club and from the time I saw his first abstraction, I told him he has talent,” adding that the painter, who was working at the Public Works Department in Chepauk, wanted to become a writer at that point, and was already being published in Malayalam. “He is a very good colourist,” said Bhaskaran, adding that Kudallur’s strength was balancing colour with light.
Kudallur’s is a multifaceted oeuvre, where the colours he worked with changed with his moods and the work itself became a balancing act between the nonchalant, composed and the uproarious.
The artist has been part of several exhibitions in Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata, France and Czechoslovakia. His works were shown at the Bhopal Biennale in 1991 and 1998, he participated in the VIIth Triennial in Delhi in 1991 and the 3rd Asian Art show at Fukuoka, Japan and he has been part of a group show at Delfina Gallery, London. He has won multiple awards, including the Tamil Nadu Lalit Kala Akademi award in 1982 and the National Academy Award in 1988.
The artist passed away in Chennai, India in July 2022.
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Born
February 15, 1945
Kerela
Died
July 18, 2022
Education
Self-Taught
Exhibitions
2012 'Small is Beautiful', Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai
2012 'Synergy...
2012 'Small is Beautiful', Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai
2012 'Synergy 2012', 12th Anniversary Show, Tao Art Gallery, Mumbai
2011 'Melange', The Harrington Street Arts Centre, Kolkata
2010 'Black is Beautiful', India Fine Art, Mumbai
2009 'Indian Harvest', presented by Crimson- The Art Resouce, Bangalore at SG Private Banking, Singapore
2009 'Deep In Black', Galerie Muller and Plate, Munich
1996|Ex.,|'Madras and Emotion',Values Art Foundation|Madras *
1993 |Ex.,|Jehangir Gallery|Bombay *
1992 |Ex.,|'Homage to Arthur Rimbaud'|India & Besancon,France *
1992 |Ex.,|Arts Acre Invitees |Calcutta *
1990 |Ex.,|Pundole *
1990 |Ex.,|Sakshi Gallery|Madras *
1988 |Ex.,|National Ex.,RB.LKA(LKNA :Blue) *
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PAST AUCTIONS
Showing
4
of
4
works
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Lot 110
Details
Auction 2003 (May)
6-8 May 2003
Untitled
Oil on canvas
47 x 43.5 in
Winning bid
$1,050
Rs 49,350
(Inclusive of buyer's premium)
USD payment only. Why?
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PAST StoryLTD AUCTIONS
Showing
4
of
12
works
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