You are on page 1of 8

Cholamandal ArtistsVillage

akkithamnarayanan c.douglas k.s.gopal p.gopinath m.v.devan k.r.harie k.v.haridasan p.s.nandhan s.nandagopal s.p.jayakar k.jayapalapanicker a.selvaraj m.senathipathi s.g.vasudev venkatapathy v.vishwanathan richardjesudoss muralidharan palaniappan s.paramasivam

Address: Cholamandal Cultural Centre for Contemporary Art East Coast Road Injambakkam, Chennai 600 041 T: +91 44 24490092 E: cholaartist@yahoo.com W: www.cholamandalartistsvillage.org
69

galleryprofile

The beaches of Cholamandalam village on the Mammallapuram coast at village Injambakkam, 9 km from Chennai, have witnessed a quiet and beautiful movement since 1966. That was when the Cholamandalam Artists Village was established. It is the largest artists commune in India, whose artists are credited for the Madras Movement of Art (1950s1980s), which brought modernism to art in the South India. Their work is widely recognized as some of the best art produced in postwar India, and is shown regularly in galleries across the country. The community was founded by K. C. S. Paniker, the principal of the Madras School of Arts, along with his students and a few artists associated with the college. It used the `art-meets-craft approach where artists made handicrafts for a living even as they pursued their art. It has over twenty resident painters and sculptors, who live as a community and pool their skills; they also run the Artists Handicrafts Association, a cooperative which manages the village and sale of works through the permanent exhibition at the complex, which includes paintings, sketches, terra-cotta/stone/metal sculptures, batiks and handicrafts etc., made by the artists living the village, making the village a selfsupporting entity. By 1970s, the village became self-sufficient, and grew into one of the most important meeting places for international artists in India, and today, it remains one of the few artist-driven movements that India. Several Cholamandalam artists have also shown in Europe, the United States and South America. Four decades on, it is one of the few artists colonies in the world to survive successfully and its foundation remains one of the 10 biggest art moments in India.

Akitham Narayanan (b. 1939)


Untitled Acrylic on canvas 24 x 24 inches

70

71

C. Douglas (b. 1951)

Untitled Mixed media on paper mounted on canvas 48 x 36 inches

P. Gopinath (b. 1948)


Untitled Acrylic on canvas 48 x 36 inches

K. S. Gopal (b. 1938)


Om Graphic print 18 x 18 inches

M.V. Devan (b. 1928)


Composition Pen & ink drawing 12 x 15 inches

72

73 69

K. R. Harie (b. 1941)


Rockscape Pen & ink drawing 30 x 22 inches

P. S. Nandhan (b. 1940)


Twisted form Granite 34 x 11 inches

K.V. Haridasan (b. 1937)


Brahmasutra Oil on canvas 48 x 48 inches

S. Nandagopal (b. 1946)


Sleep Welded copper and brass

74

75

K. Jayapala Panicker (b. 1937)


Untitled Mixed media on paper 22 x 15 inches

S. P. Jayakar (b. 1931)


Rama & Sita Acrylic on paper 16 x 22 inches

A. Selvaraj (b. 1943)


Untitled Acrylic on canvas 36 x 48 inches

76

77

M. Senathipathi (b. 1939)


Untitled Acrylic on canvas 48 x 36 inches

Venkatapathy (b. 1935)


Untitled Acrylic on canvas 44 x 36 inches

S. G.Vasudev (b. 1941)


Rhapsody Acrylic on canvas 48 x 36 inches

V.Vishwanathan (b. 1940)


Untitled Acrylic on canvas 36 x 36 inches

78

79

Muralidharan (b. 1954)


Untitled Mixed media on canvas 29 x 18 inches

Richard Jesudoss (b. 1939)


Untitled Bronze 15 inches

Palaniappan (b. 1957)


Albuquerque Lithograph 22 x 30 inches

80

81

S. Paramasivam (b. 1942)


Untitled Welded copper sheet 60 inches

82

You might also like