SELECTED WORKS BY Tallur L.N.
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Tallur L.N.
Untitled
2007
Inflatable bed, silicon, latex rubber, medical cot and forceps
275 x 280 x 160 cm |
 



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Bangalore born Tallur is an Indian artist who has rarely ventured outside India and grew up in the rural community. His works speak of the grinding poverty in the cultivated countryside. Employing Indian signs and symbols, Tallur conceives works that are characteristic of the underbelly of India, while still successfully managing to translate the anxiety of his subject matter to a larger audience. Untitled 2007 contains a hospital bed, with battered and torn bronze mattresses piled high. Tallur’s work delivers an incredibly depressing sight and sign of the objects of social utilitarianism. His sculptural works are riddled with the agony of laboured situations. For the artist, there is a pleasurable absurdity in the dishevelled traditions of the farmlands and the villages when compared to the new American-styled hyper-real cities that function as cash accumulators. |
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ARTIST INFORMATION
Tallur L.N.'s BIOGRAPHY

1971
Born in India
Shares time between India and Korea
SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2008
Antimatter, Arario New York, New York
2007
Bon Appetite, Arario Seoul, Seoul, Korea
2000
Past Modern Interactive Art Objects Bose Pacia Modern, Soho, New York
1999
Gallery Chemould, Mumbai, India
GROUP EXHIBITIONS
2008
Passage to India, Royal Academy of Art, London, UK
Mechanism of Motions, Anant Art Center, Mumbai, India
2007
Subcontingent, Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Italy
Curated by Ilaria Bonacosa and Francesco Manacorda
Hungry God, Busan Museum of Art, Busan, Korea
2006
Hyper Design -6th Shanghai Biennale, Shanghai Art Museum China
9th Bienal de La Habana, Habana, Cuba
Hungry God, Arario Beijing, China
Beautiful Cynicism, Arario Beijing, China
Edgy of the Desire: recent art in India, Curated by Chaitanya Sambrani, 2004 to 2007 (touring): Museum-Art Gallery of Western Australia, July-Sep,2004; Asia society New York, Mar-July 2005; Tamayo museum, Mexico city; Aug-Oct 2005; Museum of Contemporary, Monterrey Mexico, Nov-Jan 2006; Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, Mar-Jun 2006; Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Sep 2006 Jan 2007
2005
Border, World Socialist Forum, Brazil
Iconography in Transient Times, Gallery Sumakha, Curated by Marta Jakimowicz-Delhi
2004
Haste Modern, Nature Morte-New Delhi
Busan Biennale, Busan, Korea, Curated by Tae-man Choi, and Manu D Park
Bifocal Vision: The Near and Far in Contemporary Indian Art, Lisbon, Curated by Nancy Adajania and Luis serpa
crossing generations: diVERGE, Organised by Gallery Chemould, Mumbai, Curated by
Geetha Kapur and Chaitanya Sambrani
2003
Eclectic, Total Museum, Seoul, Korea, Organised by Yellow sea Internationa, Korea, Curated by Dilip Ranade
2002
LMU, Leeds Metropolitan University Gallery, Leeds, Organised by LMU, Leeds, UK
2000
Millenium Logo, National gallery of Modern art, Mumbai, Organised by Art India Magazine, Mumbai, India
Art in the World-2000, Paris, Organised by Beaux-Art Magazine, Paris, France
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Other artists in SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME: NEW SCULPTURE
David Altmejd | Kader Attia | Dan Attoe | Huma Bhabha | Karla Black | Sarah Braman | Bozidar Brazda | Olaf Breuning | David Brooks | Peter Coffin | Michael DeLucia | Daphne Fitzpatrick | David Herbert | Christian Holstad | Jessica Jackson Hutchins | Alina and Jeff Bliumis | Alice Könitz | Molly Larkey | Jorge Mayet | William J. O'Brien | Kaz Oshiro | Gosha Ostretsov | Florian Roithmayr | Sterling Ruby | Macrae Semans | Conrad Shawcross | Tamuna Sirbiladze | Allison Smith | Mateo Tannatt | Stephanie Taylor | Nobuko Tsuchiya | Francis Upritchard | Banks Violette | Rebecca Warren | Andy Yoder
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