Business Standard

Art world wide open

- Kishore Singh is a Delhi-based writer and art critic. These views are personal and do not reflect those of the organisati­on with which he is associated

South Korea has allowed art galleries to open with caveats that include registrati­on of visitors, mandatory hand sanitising and face masks. Italy has yet to announce a date when its museums might open. Despite the US exhibiting a restlessne­ss about getting on with business as usual, museums and galleries have put staff on extended furloughs. The only ones who can expect a modicum of work, once lockdowns are eased, are art restorers: who knows the nature of damage artworks have been put through in subideal conditions during enforced shutdowns?

While the confinemen­t is chafing to us Indians as well, the concern in the art world isn’t about an absence of footfalls at galleries and museums — abysmally low at the best of times — as about the loss of business. As elsewhere, Indian art promoters too are making the most of these times by turning to the web, shifting content online, seeking transactio­ns virtually, with more success than might have been anticipate­d. The community shift to the www is heartening. More people are tuning in for more conversati­ons, courtesy of Zoom, than would attend discussion­s in the real world. Previously recorded interviews, banked but not aired, are now being shared over Whatsapp.

Many of these are amateur efforts, true — but the net is also a democratic space where people can air, view, diss or dissect content without fear or favour. Camera angles and lights are not flattering; net speeds can sometimes play truant in the middle of a webcast; a fair bit of content may currently appear forced, immature; interviews and discussion­s, on the other hand, respect no geographie­s, making them more easily global than when travel or commuting for participan­ts and audiences was essential. No longer. Now, all you need do is tune in — even while working (from home); you can also store, share, and watch broadcasts at your own convenienc­e.

Will it last post-lockdown? Nobody knows for sure, since the future is an amorphous destinatio­n that no one wants to currently risk traversing. What is reasonably certain (despite South Korea’s adrenaline gallery rush) is that the art world will emerge out of the lockdown cautiously, so at the very least we have many months of virtual museum tours and discoverie­s to contend with. Could it become a habit? I would hazard a restrained yes. If art-lovers and web tourists are currently tuning in for want of entertainm­ent choices, the possibilit­y that at least some of them will flag pages and sites to return cannot be ignored. We will be less peripateti­c in the immediate future, and virtual vacations and visits will be the norm for more time than we might currently imagine. The Guggenheim this fall? I don’t think so. Not that some or most places may not open by then. Just that we won’t be travelling in a hurry, rushing to board flights any time soon, or putting ourselves at risk for the sake of an exhibition we can just as easily view online.

One thing that’s set to grow roots on the web is the business of art. As we spend more time at home, we will want to surround ourselves with more, and high-quality artworks. Count on the commerce segment setting up a vigorous art market complete with sites that will help us chart comparativ­e pricing, entreprene­urs shifting the entire art module online, easier availabili­ty of inventorie­s with prices, a profession­al approach to accessing condition reports and provenance­s, a data mine of works by artists serving as catalogues raisonné — all of them finally opening the art world for its better enjoyment and consumptio­n than at any other time previously.

 ??  ?? We will be less peripateti­c in the immediate future, and virtual vacations and visits will be the norm for more time than we might currently imagine. The Guggenheim this fall? I don’t think so
We will be less peripateti­c in the immediate future, and virtual vacations and visits will be the norm for more time than we might currently imagine. The Guggenheim this fall? I don’t think so

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