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 Frederikshavn (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
Bernshtein, B. (1972), Алекс Кютт, Кальё Пыллу. Каталог выставки [Aleks Kütt, Kaljo Põllu. Catalogue of the exhibition], Moscow{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Farbregd, Turid (1982), Barn av vind og vatn [Born from wind and water]. Grafikk: Kaljo Põllu, Tekst: Jaan Kaplinski, Stavanger (Norway){{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Olt, Harry; Rapp, Birgitta (1986), Barn av vind och vatten [Born from wind and water], Södertälje (Sweden){{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
Kaljo Põllu. Eesti. Grafiikkaa 1973–1988, Oulun Kaupunginkirjasto, 1991
Kübarsepp, Riina (2005), "Visuaalse rahvaluule kollektsionäär Kaljo Põllu [Kaljo Põllu, Collector of Visual Folklore]", Mäetagused, 29: 31–74, doi:10.7592/MT2005.29.pollu. 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.