A.P. SANTHANARAJ (1932-2009) - Modern & Contemporary Art from South India
Jul 14, 2023 - Jul 23, 2023 - Various ArtistsSOAS's Brunei Gallery and The Noble Sage are pleased to present an exhibition highlighting the art of the late A.P. Santhanaraj (1932 2009) in London, as well as that of some of his contemporaries, students, and followers, for global audiences keen to learn more about the artistic development in South India after Independence.
The exhibition will run from the 14th July until the 23rd Sept 2023 and will take place at:
BRUNEI GALLERY, SOAS,
UNIVERSITY OF LONDON
THORNHAUGH STREET, RUSSELL SQUARE,
LONDON, WC1H 0XG
FREE ADMISSION
Open daily: Tuesday to Saturday 10.30am-5pm & until 8pm on Thursdays
Link to attend the Private View on the 13th July 6-8pm: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/ap-santhanaraj-1932-2009-modern-contemporary-art-from-south-india-tickets-660400534777?utm-campaign=social&utm-content=attendeeshare&utm-medium=discovery&utm-term=listing&utm-source=cp&aff=ebdsshwebdesktop
About the Exhibition
The Madras College of Arts and Craft in India was the first art school officially set up by the British in 1850. It is the least documented and considered, the interest historically falling toward Bombay, Baroda, Calcutta, and Delhi. This side-lining had the obverse effect of allowing a southern idiom to flourish, particularly in Tamil Nadu. Today there is an urgent need to globally spotlight the work of these artists as a parallel discourse to that that occurred elsewhere in India. This exhibition project is a significant stepping-stone to this end.
A.P. Santhanaraj (1932-2009) is one of the most influential artists of the second wave that followed K.C.S. Paniker and S. Dhanapal out of the Madras College of Arts and Craft. Santhanaraj forged an artistic style of his own dedicated to ascertaining the various complexities of pictorial space through abstract engagement with figurative subject matter. Crucial to his work from the start was his love of line: its meandering through pictorial space, defining and dividing in its wake, shaping, and destroying form, aiding, and inhibiting light and colour. His spontaneous free line inspired his colour palette and archetypes to emerge, especially the female heroine or lovers in an embrace. These archetypes would appear from his subconscious through the jagged lines and the spatial areas they displaced within his process. Santhanaraj saw his line as fuelled by divine power. A devout Christian himself, his understanding of artmaking related just as much to Hindu interpretations of Shiva Nataraja creating and destroying in its wake to form life.
To his last days, Santhanaraj experimented with abstraction and unconscious figuration. His paintings began with the placement of random pieces of paper on the canvas. These are then moved around the pictorial space whilst the canvas or paper itself is intermittently rotated and inspected from all angles. The methodology reveals symmetry with Jackson Pollock, a painter who in his abstraction would circle the canvas on the floor like a panther meeting its prey. Following this Santhanaraj would remove the pieces of paper, having logged the shapes to memory, and create imagery through line working from their memory. It is from this process that figuration would emerge. The resulting works have an aesthetic appeal similar to the art of M.F. Hussain though with more oscillation toward the abstract.
This show will also feature the work of:
- S. DHANAPAL
- K.M. ADIMOOLAM
- ACHUTHAN KUDALLUR
- P. GOPINATH
- S. RAVI SHANKAR
- T. ATHIVEERAPANDIAN
- G. RAMAN
- K. BENITHA PERCIYAL
- ALPHONSO DOSS
- C. DAKSHINAMOORTHY
- M. NATESH
- R.B. BHASKARAN
- PREMALATHA SESHADRI
Link to attend the Private View: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/ap-santhanaraj-1932-2009-modern-contemporary-art-from-south-india-tickets-660400534777?utm-campaign=social&utm-content=attendeeshare&utm-medium=discovery&utm-term=listing&utm-source=cp&aff=ebdsshwebdesktop