Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram
In the absence of big names,India International Art Fair becomes a platform for less-known artists
It was the absence of the India Art Summit this year that led Jaswinder Singh,owner of Mystiq Art Gallery in Defence Colony,to conceive of the India International Art Fair (IIAF). We did not want to deprive the city of an event that celebrated art, he says. The four-day fair opened at Hall No 15 at Pragati Maidan on Thursday.
Singh points out how,unlike the Indian Art Summit,where galleries represent artists the stalls at IIAF are by artists themselves. We want artists to interact directly with the audience, he says. Spread over 1,660 sq ft are around 40 stalls and participating artists come from cities like Mumbai,Bhopal,Hyderabad,Pune and Lucknow.
Apart from Rajguru,Mumbai-based Mahendra Bhagat makes an impact with his fibreglass installations of various stages of Picassos life. The Cubist artists image is painted in many shades red,with the hammer and sickle,shows him being awarded the Lenin Peace Prize; blue,with a dove,symbolises the peace movement; while another with rakish playboy overtones refers to him as a womaniser. A portrait in gold,with a crown,declares him as the king.
An art fair is a success if people turn up and there is decent art on display, says Bhagat. Mumbai-based Shiri Mehra has only two works on display. I am here to build contacts. I hope to get assignments, he explains. Singh adds that a book release,of art critic Suneet Chopras Meri Uchaou Se,and a poetry reading organised by another art critic,Prayag Shukla,on Friday,should help attract the crowds.
Entry is from Gate No 7. Passes cost Rs 250 per day and are available at the venue
Stay updated with the latest - Click here to follow us on Instagram