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Indelible impressions of the rich folklore of GOBICHETTIPALAYAM, the
hometown of A.V.Ilango, which is a bustling borough amidst verdant paddy
fields, blue mountains and meandering irrigation canal. Inspired by the
jostling crowds, street vendors, pilgrims and local people of Madurai (the
epicentre of Dravidian culture and arts), the artist synthesized the folk
idioms with interesting elements of the classical temple art and architecture,
to essay drawings and paintings. Years of idyllic paintings and drawings
of the languid or exuberant rural people at work, at rest and in celebration
are now followed by urban themes.
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The sensibilities of the urban life in South India are brought out in his imaginative compositions of cycles, cycle rickshaws and autorickshaws, lorries, bullock carts and swanky automobiles with jostling crowds.
| Noted for his "RHYTHM" series of folk dancers and musicians,
A.V. Ilango's "DANCING LINES" emanate the joyous emotion, the
powerful sinews and the graceful stances of the folk artistes. The colours
are earthy and warm in bold contradictory compositions or in refreshing
analogous tones. With numerous solo and group shows in India, Singapore
and at the Commonwealth Institute, London to his credit the artist was
selected for a Visitorship Program in November 1992 by the British Council
Division of Madras. Orient Longman Ltd., invited him to illustrate their
prestigious publication in October 1997, "SILAPATHIKARAM AND MANIMEKALAI"
transalated and retold by Lakshmi Holmstrom.
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contemporary art
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