The Sunday Guardian

Great artworks available at throwaway prices at Delhi’s Affordable Art Mela

Organised by Kolkata’s CIMA art gallery, the Affordable Art Mela is being hosted in Delhi for the first time ever, with a wide range of decently-priced drawings, watercolou­rs and paintings by renowned artists on sale at the venue, writes Bhumika Popli.

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displayed were soon rendered bare. All the paintings sold out. We spoke to Pushpa Kushwaha, an avid collector from Jaipur. “I bought a watercolou­r, an etching and a Madhubani painting. I came here just now and I was just walking around, looking at the works, thinking of what to buy and when I turned towards Lalu Prasad Shaw’s work, it was already gone,” said Kushwaha.

Sarkar says the sales are rapid because the works displayed here are among the finest in Indian contempora­ry art. She says, “Artists like Arpita Singh, Param Singh, Prabhakar Kolte among others have chosen these works through the entries we receive for CIMA’s art awards, which happen every two years. So we can guarantee the quality.”

For Sarkar, Delhi is an ideal testing ground for the art sale. She says, “This is a trial of sorts. We are trying to make it an annual event in Delhi . We can’t do too many cities in one go as the artworks are limited. Artists are giving these at considered rates, so they can’t be producing too much. Organising this kind of event is a huge fare and it takes commitment. As it was our first time here, we couldn’t keep sculptures as we do in Kolkata. Here we decided to stick to traditiona­l media.”

Sarkar took inspiratio­n for the Affordable Art Mela from the Nandan Mela, an annual art fair held at Santiniket­an on the birth anniversar­y of the master artist Nandalal Bose. “At the Nandan Mela, participat­ing artists painted for the residents of Santiniket­an, and the students and professors who stayed there bought the artworks. For example, you could get a K.G. Subramanya­n between Rs 20 to Rs 100. It was a very old tradition of Santiniket­an but it got a little diluted in all kinds of problems. We took this idea from there because we wanted to create something very informal…something for the layperson…lovers of art.”

The artworks sold here come with a hologram, a stamp and a receipt of the purchase made for authentici­ty. Sarkar says, “We wanted an atmosphere where noth- ing is fake. One can also use a credit card to pay. We wanted to make everything very friendly. We don’t want a new collector to be intimidate­d by art. There is a certain intimidati­on in galleries, with their unnecessar­y jargons and complicate­d theory towards the artworks.

She adds, “It is not as such that every piece of art should be esoteric in nature that a layman doesn’t understand it. It is fine if an artwork is beautiful, sensitive and overall well-executed. Here at Art Mela, we are offering a casual, informal, friendly way of buying. You come, see, feel, you bring your friends along, you can have a little debate, choose, it is a totally new way of buying art. It is just like the Dilli Haat. The way you approach Dilli Haat, that’s the way you approach art here. Here a layman is closer to a painting. We are trying to keep it very simple, very approachab­le and very inclusive. No distinctio­ns whatsoever.”

But Swati Gupta, a Delhi- based artist, is not too pleased with the way artworks are being showcased at the event. She says, “As an artist, I am actually just intrigued by this entire concept of the fair. Look at the way it is going on... There are some watercolou­r works here and people are just picking up paintings, casually flipping it over and keeping it. I am a water-colourist and seeing this I am actually worried. Watercolou­rs are very delicate works. There is no one at some stalls to guide people. Even the works displayed on the wall don’t have a frame, not even an acrylic sheet to protect them. With oil-based works, it is fine but with paper works, which are mostly present here, a certain protection is needed. As an artist, I would be apprehensi­ve if they had contacted me and asked me to sell my works here. Maybe that is one of the reasons they are ‘affordable’. The concept is nice but I really feel that the handling could have been better.”

Rakhi Sarkar took inspiratio­n for the Affordable Art Mela from the Nandan Mela, an annual art fair held at Santiniket­an on the birth anniversar­y of the master artist Nandalal Bose.

 ??  ?? Affordable Art Mela at the Visual Arts Gallery, India Hebitat Centre, Delhi.
Affordable Art Mela at the Visual Arts Gallery, India Hebitat Centre, Delhi.
 ?? PHOTOS: BHUMIKA POPLI ??
PHOTOS: BHUMIKA POPLI
 ??  ?? Rakhi Sarkar.
Rakhi Sarkar.

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