Tuesday, March 18, 2014



Full MOON 
photography (C) abul kalam azad
30"x30" pigment print
2014




Full MOON 
photography (C) abul kalam azad
30"x30" pigment print
2014

Full MOON 
photography (C) abul kalam azad
30"x30" pigment print
2014

Full MOON 
photography (C) abul kalam azad
30"x30" pigment print
2014

Full MOON 
photography (C) abul kalam azad
30"x30" pigment print
2014

Sunday, February 2, 2014



Social sculpture and 
political Icons





Art has never been the objective of public statuary in India, but politics is. 
State-sponsored memorials are unabashed political projects, 
and no party is an exception to this practice.

Social sculpture and political Icons
Photography © Abul Kalam Azad
30''x30''pigment prints
2014








Social sculpture and political Icons
Photography © Abul Kalam Azad
30''x30''pigment prints
2014

Social sculpture and political Icons
Photography © Abul Kalam Azad
30''x30''pigment prints
2014

Social sculpture and political Icons
Photography © Abul Kalam Azad
30''x30''pigment prints
2014

Social sculpture and political Icons
Photography © Abul Kalam Azad
30''x30''pigment prints
2014


Friday, January 24, 2014

'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014
'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014









Kollywood 2010-14





Tamil cinema  is a film industry based in ChennaiIndia, which produces feature films in the Tamil language. Most of the movie studios are located in Kodambakkam, also referred to as Kollywood, a portmanteau of Hollywood and Kodambakkam. Moving pictures have been exhibited in Chennai from 1882 onwards. The first silent movie in Tamil, Keechaka Vadham was made by R. Nataraja Mudaliar in 1916. The first talkie was a multi-lingual Kalidas which released on 31 October 1931, barely 7 months after India's first talking picture Alam Ara[ By the end of the 1930s, the legislature of the State of Madras passed the Entertainment Tax Act of 1939. Tamil cinema later had a profound effect on other filmmaking industries of India, establishing Chennai as a secondary hub for Telugu cinemaMalayalam cinemaKannada cinema, and Hindi cinema. In its modern era, Tamil films from Chennai have been distributed to various overseas theatres in Singapore, Sri Lanka, South Africa, Malaysia, Japan, Oceania, the Middle East, Western Europe, and North America.[5] The industry also inspired filmmaking in Tamil diaspora populations in other regions, such as in Europe and Canada. ''Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014



'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014




'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014





'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014




'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014




'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014




'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014





'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014





'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014




'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014





'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014








'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014





'Kollywood'' / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / pigment prints 2014




Sunday, December 29, 2013


chemical process / sepia-toned / hand-colored man with tools / photography © Abul Kalam Azad / hand colored print 2005




man with tools / photography © Abul Kalam Azad 2005 / hand colored pigment print 60''x120''  



man with tools / photography © Abul Kalam Azad 2005 / hand colored pigment print 60''x120''  


man with tools / photography © Abul Kalam Azad 2005 / hand colored pigment print 60''x120''  


man with tools / photography © Abul Kalam Azad 2005 / hand colored pigment print 60''x60''  









 

abulkalamazad

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