Pande Ketut Taman

From BASAbaliWiki
Revision as of 13:47, 30 October 2022 by Buanabali (talk | contribs) (Created page with "{{PageSponsor}} {{Biography |Full Name=Pande Ketut Taman |Photograph=20221030T133914633Z662403.jpg |Link photo=https://gallery.komaneka.com/profile/pande-ketut-taman/ |Biograp...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
20221030T133914633Z662403.jpg
Full Name
Pande Ketut Taman
Pen Name
Photograph by
Link to Photograph
https://gallery.komaneka.com/profile/pande-ketut-taman/
Website for biography
Place
Related Music
Related Books
Related Scholars Articles


Add your comment
BASAbaliWiki welcomes all comments. If you do not want to be anonymous, register or log in. It is free.

Biography


In English

Pande was born into an artistic, religious family. A gifted artist since childhood, he studied painting at the Indonesia Institute of the Arts (Institut Seni Indonesia) in Yogyakarta. He later moved with his wife and family to the small town of Muntilan in Central Java, where he lives and works within sight of both the ancient Buddhist temple of Borododur and of Mount Merapi, an active volcano. Both of these majestic and powerful sites—one man-made and celebrating the spirit, the other natural and conveying the beauty and awesome power of Nature—have strongly influenced Pande’s art. A deeply spiritual connection to the earth is a tangible element of Pande’s sculptures and paintings, and the naturalism of his style reflects his interest in the forms and materials of nature in their most fundamental state. His carved wood sculptures, many of them monumental in size, are often fashioned from the trunks or roots of trees, and depict innumerable, expressively carved human figures that seem to be emerging from the tree itself, like figures in some ancient mythological tale. For Pande, art is a daily-life practice, like taichi or meditation, that allows him to both be nourished by and to celebrate the earth and the spirit, moving from the center outwards just like a mandala–from the microcosm of the body, to his family, his town, the forests and mountains that surround him, the society to which he belongs, and the cosmos which encompasses all of us.

In Balinese

In Indonesian

Examples of work

Nothing was added yet.