Kulavoor was profiled in the third season of the Netflix docu-series, Creative Indians, featuring alongside A R Rahman, Anurag Kashyap, Anita Dongre and Piyush Pandey, amongst others.
[16] In 2012, Kulavoor collaborated with the UK design house Paul Smith for a line of t-shirts with artworks based on the Indian bicycle culture.
[21][22] In 2019, a suite of his drawings was exhibited alongside works by writer and journalist Rachel Lopez, photographer, journalist Ritesh Uttamchandani, artist Sudhir Patwardhan, photographers Pallon Daruwala and Peter Bialobrzesk as part of the show 'The Shifting City', an exhibition curated by Kaiwan Mehta, in collaboration with the Architecture Foundation India, and Rahul Mehrotra as project advisor.
[26][27] Covering the show, the website It's Nice That wrote that "[Kulavoor's] most recent body of work continues this study into the metropolis and analyses the “personal, political and the pandemic”, all the while characteristically placing the city as the backdrop.
Very much a reflection of the current global situation, The Migrants Have Left, for example, turns his previously people-focused drawings on its head as it illustrates a life in lockdown".
[28] Kulavoor's third solo 'Edifice Complex' was exhibited at Tarq Gallery in 2023[29] borrowing its title "from a phrase coined by Behn Cervantes, a Filipino activist writing in the time of the autocrat Ferdinand Marcos.
It references the phenomenon where individuals, organisations, or governments become obsessed with building grandiose structures to give an impression of power, status or progress, often at the expense of more pressing needs".