L.N. Tallur: CHEMOULD PRESCOTT ROAD.
Mogali, Roshan Kumar
L.N. Tallur: CHEMOULD PRESCOTT ROAD.
Ancient and contemporary, traditional and modern conflate in L. N.
Tallur's sculptures, making them historically ambiguous, unbounded
by time. Trained in museology, Tallur seems to be particularly concerned
with issues of age, provenance, and authenticity as well as with the
museum as a site of cultural and evolutionary taxonomy and with its
inherent politics of representation.
In his essay "On the Annals of the Laboratory State"
(1988), sociologist Shiv Visvanathan talks about how the time of
modernity became the time of the world. In it, he describes how the
cyclical theory of time of the medieval period, which permitted
"decadence and reversal," eventually gave way to a
"linear, irreversible notion of time." By resisting this
linearity, Tallur seems to be challenging not just this Eurocentric
temporality of modernity but also the logic of capitalism and
globalization. He does this, however, with wry humor, not to mention
erudition and relentless experimentalism.
In Tallur's sculptures--made using many different materials,
processes, and technologies--figures from Hindu iconography transmogrify
into cybernetic creatures. A folding mechanical arm made up of several
grindstones replaces the trunk and head of an elephant figure in
Antila--Two (all works cited, 2017). In Calibrator, a pipe wrench
becomes the upper limbs of a bronze human form wrapped in galvanized
wire. HaloX Body--Two is another bronze human form, this one drenched in
concrete; it is split in half by a rotary saw blade that is also part of
its torso. Joy Ride is a reference to a broken artifact in a local
museum, depicting the goddess Durga slaying the buffalo demon
Mahishasura. In Tallur's variation on the artifact, the deformed
figure of the goddess seems to ride the buffalo with the aid of a gear
stick attached to the animal's back. Threshold's loops of
band-saw blades resting on a stand at different heights form bean and
dumbbell shapes of varying sizes that together evoke a sort of
meditating machine god but also carry phallic symbolism.
The impish wordplay, satirical references, and wide-ranging
metaphors in Tallur's titles, as well as in the content of his
works, allow for multiple readings. He indulges in visual puns, making
the neck of the elephant out of millstones in Antila--Two, and
emphasizing the apocryphal nature of a petrosomatoglyph footprint in The
Interstice by adding a toe knob and turning it into a paduka sandal. The
saw blade in HaloX Body--Two slices the concrete-covered bronze human
figure in half, symbolizing the dualities of body and being. In
Intolerance--Two, what looks like a perfectly balanced cairn, which is
related to religious offerings and wish fulfilment, is in fact only a
sly illusion of stones that have been laboriously and skillfully piled
on top of each other; the sculpture has been carved out of a single
stone. It was one of many works in the show that dealt with weight and
burdens. Tallur is skeptical of modernity's vision for a better
future and its promise that today's hard work and sacrifice will be
meaningful tomorrow. He considers this orientation toward the future a
form of intolerance toward the present. He invited viewers to use an
electric engraver and leave petroglyphs on the "stones" in
Intolerance--Two: Their stories were dispatches not from the annals of
history, but from an urgent present.--Roshan Kumar Mogali
Caption: L. N. Tallur, HaloX Body--Two, 2017, bronze, concrete,
iron, 64 x 205/8 x 36".
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