The four Indian galleries participating at the 3-day-long fair that concluded on March 26 included Mumbai-based Chemould Prescott Road, Delhi-based Vadehra Art Gallery and Nature Morte and Kolkata-based Experimenter.
The extravagant fair which kicked off amid rainy weather and was attended among others by Oscar winning actor Leonardo DiCaprio, featured 239 galleries drawn from 35 countries.
Riyas Komu's portrait of Mahatma Gandhi looking dapper in his black barrister uniform holding a plate with the date - 9/11/1906 - signifying the non-violence movement launched by British Indians in South Africa, was another immensely popular work at the gallery.
Other exhibits at VAG included a series of charcoal paintings titled "Penal Colony" by Kerala film maker K M Madhusudhanan, two of Odiya artist Jagannath Panda's latest works - "The Gaze" and "Virtues of a Hero," Ravinder Reddy's iconic head sculpture of a woman along with two brand new sculptures of "Man" and "Nandi" by Arun Kumar H G among others.
Gupta and Bharti Kher are so high that we don't sell it here. So, this time we have brought younger artists with lower prices, because we feel that's what the markets are for here."
Engravings by Pakistani artist Seher Shah, one of Suhasini Kejriwal's "fake" paintings, Faig Ahmed's carpet works were among the few works on display at the gallery booth.
While Kolkata-based Kejriwal's painting made of embroidery work superimposed with photographs to make a collage was a fresh work created for the fair, Ahmed's carpet pieces were borrowed from an earlier set of works by the artist, Nagy said.
Kolkata-based Experimenter, which has previously showcased foreign artists at the fair, this year represented Bengali artist Rathin Barman and Pakistani artist Ayesha Sultana.
The gallery was participating in the 'Discoveries' sector of the fair, which explains the choice of younger and newer artists.
Barman's indigenous sculptures and sketches recalled the plight of those who were displaced after the partition of Bengal, their struggle to "build homes overnight" and their over five-decade-long wait to be rehabilitated in West Bengal.
"This project is about the migration from Bangladesh to India during partition. Most of the Hindu middle class from Bangladesh were forced to migrate," Barman, who spent a few months living with the migrants in Shyamnagar, a small town in the outskirts of Kolkata, said.
Also, on display were a a few sketches of unmaterialised maps, that were orginally charted out by the then government to distribute land to the migrants for their rehabilitation.
