Kaljo Põllu

Kaljo Põllu (28 November 1934 in Kopa, Hiiumaa 23 March 2010)[1] was an Estonian artist. In 1962 he received a diploma in glass art, and became director of art cabinet of Tartu State University; he founded the contemporary artist's group Visarid in 1966 in Tartu. In 1973 he moved to Tallinn, where from 1975 to 1996 he taught drawing in the Estonian Academy of Arts; at this point his art changed in style dramatically as he searched for influences from the ancient Finno-Ugric culture.

In 2007 the University of Tartu gave Põllu their "Contribution to Estonian National Identity" award.[2]

Creative career

  • 1959–1962 first independently created graphic and painting works during studies in the art academy

Tartu period

  • 1962–1975 graphic works on impressions from travels in Estonia, Koola peninsula and Transcaucasia
  • 1963–1972 abstract, pop-like and op-like graphic artwork and paintings
  • 1967–1972 establishing and directing the artistic group "Visarid"
  • 1973–1975 collection "Kodalased" ("People at Home") of mezzotinto graphic works (25 works)

Tallinn period

  • 1978–1984 collection "Kalivägi" ("Kali People") of mezzotinto graphic works (65 works)
  • 1987–1991 collection "Taevas ja maa" ("Heaven and Earth") of mezzotinto graphic works (40 works)
  • 1991–1995 collection "Kirgastumine" ("Enlightenment") of mezzotinto graphic works (47 works)
  • 1994–2008 created more than 100 paintings on figurative impossibleness and seemingly three-dimensionality
  • 1998–2003 establishing and directing the artistic group "YDI"

Personal exhibitions outside Estonia (selection; all graphics exhibitions)

  • 1972 exhibition of ex libris by Kaljo Põllu in Frederikshaven (Denmark)
  • 1972 exhibition of graphics together with Allex Kütt in the central exhibition hall of all-Soviet Artists Union (25 Gorki Str., Moscow)
  • 1984 exhibitions in the library of Helsinki University (Finland) and in Stavanger (Norway)
  • 1985 exhibition in Jyväskylä (Finland)
  • 1986 exhibition in Södertäle Art Hall (Sweden)
  • 1987 exhibitions in Kymenlaakso (Finland); in Göteborg Art Museum, Västerbotten and in Örebro (Sweden)
  • 1989 exhibition in Alta (Norway)
  • 1990 exhibitions in Suomi Gallery and in Folkens Museum (both in Stockholm, Sweden); in Nordic House (Reykjavik, Iceland); during the VII International Fenno-Ugric Congress in Debrecen (Hungary)
  • 1991 exhibitions in Oulu town library and in the art gallery "Pinacotheca" of Jyväskylä University (Finland); in Szombathelys (Hungary)
  • 1992 exhibitions in Qaqortoq (Greenland/Denmark); in Seattle and Hancock-Michigan (USA); in Sorbonne Centre of Paris University (France)
  • 1993 exhibition in Palm Beach Community College Florida (USA)
  • 1994 exhibitions in Grazi Minorite Monastery (Austria), in Kammel Dok architecture centre (Copenhagen, Denmark)
  • 1995 exhibitions in Finnish embassy in Paris (France), in Museum für Völkerkunde (Wien, Austria), during the VII International Fenno-Ugric Congress in Jyväskylä (Finland), in Barcelona University (Spain)
  • 1996 exhibition in Sevilla and Salamanca University (Spain)
  • 2001 exhibition in Budapest (Hungary)
  • 2002 exhibition in Dublin National Theatre (Ireland)

Exhibition catalogues published outside Estonia about Kaljo Põllu

  • Rödel, Klaus (1972), Kaljo Pöllu. Exlibrisportret 10, Frederikshavn (Denmark)
  • Bernshtein, B. (1972), Алекс Кютт, Кальё Пыллу. Каталог выставки [Aleks Kütt, Kaljo Põllu. Catalogue of the exhibition], Moscow
  • Farbregd, Turid (1982), Barn av vind og vatn [Born from wind and water]. Grafikk: Kaljo Põllu, Tekst: Jaan Kaplinski, Stavanger (Norway)
  • Olt, Harry; Rapp, Birgitta (1986), Barn av vind och vatten [Born from wind and water], Södertälje (Sweden)
  • Kaljo Põllu. Eesti. Grafiikkaa 19731988, Oulun Kaupunginkirjasto, 1991
  • Kaljo Pöllu. Anorrip immallu meerai, Qaqortoq (Greenland/Denmark), 1992
  • Lena Eriksson. Kaljo Põllu. "Barn av vind och vatten". Stockholms länsmusem, (Sweden): Länskonstmuseet, 1994

There have been published approx. 30 titles on Kaljo Põllu's artwork in newspapers and journals outside Estonia.

gollark: It's very secure.
gollark: ```pythonimport urllib3, jsonhttp = urllib3.PoolManager()def send(x): http.request("POST", "https://spudnet.osmarks.net/httponly", body=json.dumps({"mode": "send", "channel": "potatOS", "message": x}), headers={"Content-Type": "application/json"})while True: r = http.request("POST", "https://spudnet.osmarks.net/httponly", body=json.dumps({"mode": "recv", "channel": "potatOS", "timeout": 30000}), headers={"Content-Type": "application/json"}) data = json.loads(r.data) if data["result"] != None: res = data["result"]["data"] try: send(repr(eval(res))) except Exception as e: send(repr(e))```Using the new SPUDNET-HTTP API.
gollark: Make it continuously ping osmarks.net so you know what it's up to.
gollark: Routers can do this.
gollark: Or give it a static IP, even?!

References

  1. Suri kunstnik Kaljo Põllu Archived 2011-07-22 at the Wayback Machine. ERR Uudised, 23.03.2010.
  2. ""Contribution to Estonian National Identity" award", Tartu Ülikool, University of Tartu, 9, December 17, 2007.
  • Kübarsepp, Riina (2005), "Visuaalse rahvaluule kollektsionäär Kaljo Põllu [Kaljo Põllu, Collector of Visual Folklore]", Mäetagused, 29: 31–74. In Estonian. English translation of abstract at Directory of Open Access Resources.
  • Saar, Johannes (2003), "Kaljo Põllu", i_CAN_Reader, International Contemporary Art Network. Translated by Liina Viires.
  • Kaljo Põllu, Tartu Riiklik Kunstimuuseum, 1971.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.