|    INDIAN ART 2008    |    2007    |

Indian ArtTwo years ago, the Financial Express declared that Indian art prices were catching up with global prices. The same year, Indian artist Tyeb Mehta's ‘Mahisasura’ sold for nearly $ 1.6 million at a Christie’s auction. Since then, at least a half–dozen works by contemporary Indian masters have sold for $1 million–plus. The jewel of the Bonhams Dubai sale in March 2008 was ‘The Elder‘ by Indian modernist F.N. Souza at $380,000.


In the past two years, investors have started at least seven "art funds" in which a curator buys and sells artworks instead of stocks. An example of supercharged returns – a 6’x 4’ oil painting by Ram Kumar sold for $32,000 in 2003 it will probably fetch $500,000 today – up by a staggering 1,462% !

Last year, TEHELKA constructed a high profile auction of Indian art, Art for Freedom with canvases painted jointly by top–line Indian artists and eminent Indians and Britons. Each canvas was a unique piece of great curiosity and value.

Indian ArtIn extravagant fashion, the first art event by TEHELKA at Bonham’s on Bond Street in the heart of London’s high fashion district was an unprecedented show.

At the art auction, Shah Rukh Khan came together with MF Husain to paint a canvas live before an electrified - and record - audience. More than 1,500 people packed the auction hall and the galleries leading up to it.

Bonhams was staggered by the response; the audience was in thrall of the spectacle unfolding before them - Husain and Khan at work on an image of the mythic Anarkali and Salim in earthy pastels as Bade Ghulam Ali Khan played in the background. A never-before event, and it is unlikely Bonhams are going to play hosts to such an auction again.

This year, in this buoyant atmosphere of a confident emerging India, TEHELKA brings to London an ambitious art exhibition and sale, again in support of independent media.

 
  MASTER TAKES  
 
 
Kasi on Babu Ishwar Prasad  August, 2007
 

I recently went to an exhibition by Babu Eshwar Prasad at the Bodhi Art Gallery in Mumbai. Thirteen paintings and two sculptures — titled Time Past and Time Present and Time to Come — were on display. You do not see human figures in Prasad’s work. One painting shows Gandhiji’s ashram in Ahmedabad, his desk, a freshly-laid white cloth, table and other personal effects. But then you realise it is a glass room with the door completely shut, meaning it has become an area people cannot enter. Another painting has the image of the Buddha meditating with a huge wall alongside, but it could also be a window to the outer world or simply a painting hung on the wall. Prasad’s paintings juxtapose objects that you don’t expect to see in the same context. They contain ambivalent imagery that forces you more ...

Kashi is an artist. He lives in Bangalore