Cheenu Pillai

Cheenu Pillai
Cheenu Pillai

Balaji (2006) Oil on canvas
Born December 19, 1971
Pattukottai
Nationality Indian
Field Painting
Training Self taught
Movement Dravidian Orphism
Works Celestial Wedding, Dasavatar,Advaitham,Beloved thief

Cheenu Pillai is a self taught artists[1] from chennai, India who blends European expressionism with dravidian themes.

Contents

Career

Cheenu Pillai was born in 1971 in a village in Tanjore district. He spent his school days in his village and then in Tanjore. Cheenu took to painting at very early age, thanks to his elder brother who was artist himself. Brought up in a pious background, portraits of gods used to be his favorite theme. At that age, his rendering of the religious images fulfilled purely a spiritual need. But as he delved more into the forms, the symmetry and balance in the Hindu iconography captured his imagination.

He kept pursuing art with passion all his life, but never considered taking it up as a career. For a consistent topper at school, the only career choice seemed like a white collar job, which is exactly where he ended up. He did his MBA and got into investment banking. Emerging opportunities in information technology led him shift career midway, but art continued as the primary passion. His inspirations heightened during his stint in Europe, where he regularly frequented art galleries.

in 2003, he decided to take up art more seriously and quit his job as the president of a large software company. He continued doing some consultancy works in software, but was able to spend lot more time in painting.

Apparao galleries included Cheenu's works as part of a group show in 2004. Again in 2007, A.v.ilango's art space and Tangerine art sponsored an exhibition of his paintings from the divinity series at the tangerine restaurant, which gave him the initial impetus.

Style

Cheenu has evolved a unique style of representation which is hybrid between European movements like cubism, orphism and Indian sensibilities in terms of color schemes and layouts.

References

  1. ^ Muthukrishnan, Abirami. "Art and non-conformism" (Web article). Ergo. http://www.goergo.in/?p=136. Retrieved 2008-01-14. 
  • The Hindu Metroplus dated December 25, 2007
  • The deccan Chronicle dated December 28, 2007

External links


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