Lallan was born to a tribe of pastoralists in a valley of the Aravali mountain range. While growing up, he inherited poetry, music and folk traditions, primarily from his grandmother, alongside other members of the tribe. He has been painting and working with wood since the age of five. He is a multi-disciplinary artist who works with text, video, performance, new media, fabric, mixed media and earthen material to create expressions. In the early years of his professional career, he was commissioned a wide array of projects across the Indian subcontinent by United Nations, UNICEF, Ford Foundation, various NGO’s and other organisations, while working alongside and for various ministries like the, Ministry Of Environment, Ministry Of Human Resources, National Green Tribunal, Ministry Of Water Resources et al, primarily creating works concerned with migration, ethnicities, displacement, agriculture, human rights, women and children issues, labour rights and issues, employment and environmental issues. The experiences lived from these years, have led him to sketch expressions that long to elude the contemporary, and strive to communicate with the roots from which, they were born.