Laxma Goud: Solo Exhibition

March 19 - April 15, 2009
London

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K Laxma Goud: Solo Show

19 March – 15 April, 2009
Opening 18 March, 2009 6:30 – 9:00pm

Through the 1970s K. Laxma Goud explored the technique of etching building on the visual
language he had developed in the drawings and woodcuts he made in the 1960s. Goud had
studied both printmaking and mural painting between 1963 and 1965 after his initial diploma
in drawing and painting, so this progression was consistent with his academic development.
Many of the resulting works featured figures who through Goud's use of the etched line,
visually blend into each other or into neighbouring figures, animals or the landscape. The
overall effect is a body of works that gesture towards mythological ideas around
transformation.

For example his 1972 work, 'Untitled (Man with Goats Near Tree)' seems, on first site, to
show the simple pastoral scene. Yet on closer inspection, Goud's use of the etched line works
in a way to suggest unlikely parallels. The flattened effect caused by etching means that the
goat immediately next to the goatherd is bisected by him, rather than being behind him.
Furthermore, the hairs on the man's chest are rendered with the same weight as the fur of the
goat – in effect there is an odd continuity between the man and the goat. The second goat,
further to the right, similarly seems to extend from the first goat. And above both goats seems
a ghostly female figure, rendered through much less defined area; except that instead of a
head, a tree rather enigmatically sprouts upwards. Man, woman, goat, tree are linked in a
continuous visual plane through the clever use of etched line, each bleeding into the other,
creating a tableau where each element is in the process of transforming what is next to it.

Goud had explored this idea of transformation before – for example in his 1964 woodcut,
'Untitled (Black and White With Three Figures), the two female figures seem embedded in
the background through the use of line. He would also do so in works in other mediums – for
example his ink on paper work from 1979 'Untitled (Cow Woman).' And many
commentators have noted the playful conjoining of man, woman and animal in bucolic and
Bacchanalian bliss through his oeuvre. However, it has not really been noted just how much
Goud's choice of the medium of etching enables some very strange equivalences – birds
emerge from the top of women's heads; bulls seem to morph into trees that in turn morph into
naked figures. Goud's playful works from this period suggest less an idealized pastoral vision
(as later commentators have shoehorned him into) but a darker, wittier world where things
take one form before shifting out of them and into another; a mythological world of tricksters
and shapeshifters.

K. Laxma Goud was born in 1940 in Nizampur, Andra Pradesh and studied in Hyderabad. He
has exhibited widely in India, USA, South America and Europe, including solo shows at
Aicon Gallery, New York, (2007), Galerie 88, Delhi (2009), Guild Art Gallery, Mumbai
(2006) Grey Art Gallery, New York (2001). He lives and works in Hyderabad.

Aicon Gallery, 8 Heddon Street, London W1B 4BU
Tel: +44 20 7734 7575, Fax: +44 20 7734 0090, london@aicongallery.com
www.aicongallery.com

K. Laxma Goud's solo show at Aicon Gallery, London, is accompanied by a group show,
'Shapeshifter', that features works by Michael Bauer, Richard Hamilton, Justin Ponmany and
Debanjan Roy.

For further press information and visuals, please contact
Niru Ratnam on niru@aicongallery.com
020 7734 7575