Gallery Silver Scpaes
Untitled
Untitled
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Artist: Achuthan Kudallur
Medium: Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 11 × 12 inches (27.94 × 30.48 cm)
This abstract painting presents a compelling exploration of form, color, and structure through a dynamic interplay of overlapping shapes rendered in rich shades of red, gold, ochre, and black. The artist skillfully blends these hues to create a vibrant, fluid composition where individual shapes dissolve into one another, evoking a sense of continuous movement and organic transformation. This merging of forms challenges the viewer’s perception, inviting an immersive engagement with the artwork’s shifting visual rhythms.
The canvas is structured by a series of vertical and horizontal lines that segment the composition into a subtle grid-like framework. This underlying geometric order contrasts with the fluidity of the shapes, creating a tension between control and spontaneity that animates the painting. The grid serves as both a compositional device and a symbolic element, suggesting a balance between fragmentation and unity within the abstract narrative. Brushwork is visibly expressive, with textured strokes that add depth and tactility to the surface. The layering of paint and the deliberate application of color emphasize the materiality of the medium, drawing attention to the physical process of creation as much as to the final image. The textured surface enhances the immersive quality of the work, allowing light and shadow to interact with the pigment and heightening the sense of movement across the canvas.
Within the broader context of abstract art, this painting aligns with traditions that prioritize emotional intensity and the exploration of pure form and color over representational accuracy. Its use of a limited yet warm palette recalls elements of both Expressionism and early Modernist abstraction, while the structured grid references the geometric rigor of movements such as Constructivism and De Stijl. The work’s interplay between fluidity and structure situates it within a contemporary discourse on abstraction’s capacity to express complexity through simplicity. This painting offers a vivid meditation on the tensions between order and chaos, movement and stasis, surface and depth. It challenges viewers to experience abstraction not merely as a visual phenomenon but as an active, emotional encounter, one that invites repeated viewing and ongoing interpretation. Through its vibrant color dynamics and thoughtful compositional balance, the artwork asserts itself as a significant contribution to contemporary abstract painting.


Why Choose Us
Art has always, naturally, reflected the development and exploration of different thoughts and perceptions, and our current postmodern era is no different. It is interesting to see how art has evolved visually, yet the traditional methods of composing art remain a valid means of expression.
All it takes for an artist to rise above normalcy, is inspiration, which fuels his passion to paint beautiful creations throughout his life.
The valuable expression of art is always there with us, but now this expression is yet to take an interesting diversion with our art gallery, Gallery Silver Scapes, located in Hauz Khas Enclave. Art is no longer considered just decorative but has evolved and come forth as a major form of investment yielding high rates of returns for its buyers, making it an expression commonly used.

Mrs Mayor was walked into the art world by the legendary modernist Bimal Das Gupta, one of whose biggest collections remains with Gallery Silver Scapes. In the 1980s, as head and first curator of the Habiart Gallery founded by Mrs Rekha Modi — a childhood friend — Mrs Mayor worked closely with and curated shows for renowned artists such as A Ramachandran, GR Santosh, Rameshwar Broota, Sakti Burman, MK Bardhan, Dhiraj Chaudhury, M Sivanesan, and Arup Das among others.
Besides modern masters, she also worked with young contemporaries such as Sudip Roy, Paresh Maity, Subroto Kundu, Vinod Sharma, and many more. Artworks commissioned by her are now part of prestigious collections, such as those of the India Habitat Centre, Ranbaxy, Pepsi, Hotel Lalit, Bank of America, and many more private and public collections.