Valsan Koorma Kolleri

Valsan Koorma Kolleri

Valsan Koorma Kolleri came to Madras to study in 1971 at a time when the sculptor Dhanpal headed the College of Arts and Crafts. An Artists’ Village, under the guidance of K.C.S. Panicker offered several possibilities for practicing artists to continue working without the anxiety of having to find other means of physical sustenance.

Working initially with the geometrical abstraction which originated from the study of the human body in its structural configuration and in movement, Kolleri would cast plaster and concrete in single and multiple modules, later assembling them into totemic formats which created a startling dialogue between the primitive and the urban.

The range of materials which he now uses has widened to include wood, leather, bones, hair, nests and hives, things which have been outgrown or discarded, having aged or lost their value in the quest for novelty. Turning loss to advantage, he creates a theatre where these things are reinstated, pending further use; by virtue of their relationship to their surroundings, they encompass a space which far exceeds their immediate limits.

Kolleri has an affiliation with working processes which marginalizes any message that stands apart from the act of putting a piece together. As he asserts, concept apart, the placement of the object or the angle of inclination which it finally assumes is in fact the sculpture, the instant of intervention creating a value hitherto non – existent.

Valsan Koorma Kolleri