"We do not need to compare ourselves to other biennales or model ourselves on even important exhibitions, such as the Venice Biennale," said Madhusudanan, whose work 'Logic of Disappearance' at Aspinwall House here has sparked huge interest.
"We have to develop our own discourses with people and we have made a good start in this direction," said the artist, who was among the prominent founders of the Radical Painters' and Sculptors' Association during the 1980s.
He was particularly moved by Australian artist Fiona Hall's 'Curve Ball', which also features at Aspinwall House.
Madhusudhanan's work consists of 90 charcoal drawings depicting several historical incidents and characters, as if seen in quick flashes of light.
More From This Section
"There was a lighthouse on the shores of my birthplace and these drawing have been created as image fragments made visible by its sweeping light," said the artist, who has the credit of writing the manifesto for the left-leaning Radical Movement among artists.
"These drawings reflect his knowledge on cinema, and use the same visual language to retrieve and revive an ideology from its darkness. It opens up great possibilities to immediate a discourse on communism and humanism," Komu said.
Madhusudhanan, who visited the Biennale over the past week, commended the efforts of KMB '14 director Bose Krishnamachari, Komu and curator Jitish Kallat, saying "they have put their lives into the biennale, and it can be seen in the exhibition.