Practicing Success

Target Exam

CUET

Subject

Fine Arts

Chapter

The Modern Indian Art

Question:

How did K. C. S. Paniker demonstrate the historical roots of abstraction in India?

Options:

By imbibing artistic motifs from Tamil and Sanskrit scripts, floor decorations, and rural crafts

By imbibing artistic motifs from Ramayana and Mahabharata

By exclusively focusing on Western art movements

By imbibing artistic motifs from folk songs and dances

Correct Answer:

By imbibing artistic motifs from Tamil and Sanskrit scripts, floor decorations, and rural crafts

Explanation:

Answer: By imbibing artistic motifs from Tamil and Sanskrit scripts, floor decorations, and rural crafts
K. C. S. Paniker showed by imbibing artistic motifs from Tamil and Sanskrit scripts, floor decorations, and rural crafts that abstraction has a long history in India.

Abstraction was important for many sculptors like Piloo Pochkhanawala and printmakers like Krishna Reddy. For them, the use of material was as important as the new shapes they were creating. Whether in painting, printmaking or sculpture, abstraction had a wide appeal for many artists across the 1960s and 1970s. In South India, K. C. S. Paniker, who later went on to establish Cholamandalam, an artist village near Madras, was a pioneer in abstraction. In fact, he showed by imbibing artistic motifs from Tamil and Sanskrit scripts, floor decorations and rural crafts that abstraction has a long history in India.