The Indian Antiquities, Modern Contemporary Fine Arts and Books auction by the Osian's Group will be held on April 7 with an opening preview exhibition on April 3 at the Tao Art Gallery.
Among the collections are artworks by modern contemporary masters like Ustad Allah Bukhsh's 'Krishna Series' of mid-1920s, Nicholas Roerich's mid-1930's 'Pilgrim in the Himalayas' and K C S Paniker's earliest and the largest reference of marrying art and crafts vocabulary through his 1964 'Words and Symbols'; one of the last paintings done before departing for London in the late 1940s by F N Souza; and M F Husain's horses from the late Indira Gandhi family collection.
The artworks also include an important 3rd-4th century Buddhist gray Schist sculpture from the Gandharan region and Kushan Period, formerly from the collection of a prince; and a significant medieval Buff Sandstone Stele of Saraswati from the 12th century to most important schools of miniatures from the Indian belt (Deccani, Pahari, Mughal, Mewar and Company).
These examples represent some of the pinnacles of India's lost artistic heritage and now the Indian collector has a chance to bring them back home, Osian's said.
He stressed that it is time to recognise that the greatest believer and supporter of high culture must be the government so as to allow the freedoms to the private sector to build grand infrastructure and share in the risk involved.
"We still pay import duties to bring back Indian art to India. This is utter ignorance. High culture is for the masses over time, but the infrastructure must be built from the most elite platforms to the most publicly accessible simultaneously. This vision existed to some extent after independence, it died during the 1970s and so far has seen no resurrection or recalibration for the contemporary needs and aspirations of India and Indians.
"It is time to deeply re-delve into the needs of India's artistic heritage and build something truly great which allows us to share with pride the best of India's cultural civilisation," Tuli said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
