Kolkata, 8th June: The conglomeration
of Indian Art Dealers and the Society of Gallery Owners (SGO) have planned to
follow what the Indian Premier League (IPL) has already done successfully.
The recent
trend of trying to revert to gladiatorial times seems to be catching up. In a
recent conference of art dealers and gallery owners, it was unanimously decided
that the Indian Art League (IAL) should be immediately formed.
A
spokesperson for the IAL, on conditions of anonymity, said that the practice of
buying artists is not new. Many art galleries both here and abroad have - in
the guise of promoting artists - been doing for some time what the IPL and now
the Indian Art League plan to do officially. The times are changing and social
values are seeing a paradigm shift. Therefore, the need for covert operations
is redundant. This, the spokesman argued, augurs well for the art industry.
Going by
what various other players, including artists feel, the probable scenario that
might emerge is that the chief beneficiaries in these gladiatorial games would
be the betting syndicates (read investors). The hapless artist gets involved,
as survival of their respective art practices largely hinges on the whims and
fancies of buying and selling trends. It would be more about bulls and bears rather
than good or bad art.
Needless to
say, art would be the biggest loser, as it is believed that the boom in the art
market had in many ways been counter-productive in terms of creativity. The
spokesperson from IAL felt otherwise. He went on to explain that this form of
ownership has been practised in football for a long time the world over and has
promoted excellence. “So was slavery!” countered an art enthusiast. Whatever
are the precedents and whatever the logic and reasoning offered by those for -
as well as against - arguments and counter arguments would not end in a hurry.
Indications are that this would be a prolonged battle and that the IAL would
come out victorious, given that their muscle and money power is more than
evident.
Senior
artists, who have not yet made their mark in terms of sales, feel that the IAL
would spell doom for them. After all, in this game of large investments, buyers
would in all probability put their money on younger artists who have the
potential of a longer “shelf life”, as opposed to senior artists who may not
outlive their investment term and would be considered potentially high-risk
investments. There is, after all, a difference between art and cricket, as players
considered too old for ODIs and T20s, are playing in the IPL. Artists who lose
out too much may be eligible for stable transfers before their contracts end.
The other
parallel that the IAL has with the IPL is that art galleries would be fielding
their respective “stables”, as the “teams” would be called. It is not clear
whether or not the Shah Rukh Khans and the Preity Zintas would feature in the
auctioning and ownership process, or if they would merely be celebrities chosen
to grace inaugurations.
Mr Arty
Planwallah, the brain behind IAL, emphasised that this would revolutionise the
way the art market has been perceived for so long - as a cloak and dagger
affair - which only a chosen few in the cabal were privy to. “This will bring
about a much needed transparency in art dealings hitherto sadly absent,” Mr
Planwallah signed off.
A minor
member of SGO cautioned that like in many other enterprises, here too, there is
the lurking fear of bit players being marginalised. “Do we need this brand of
globalisation in the art market as well?” he thundered.
Game show for Artists
Keeping with the growing interest in art and artists,
Megamedia Serials, a production company who had earlier run very successful
game shows are planning to launch a game
show involving artists. In a tentative format for the game show, the company
plans to invite all artists whose work fetch more than one lakh rupees each
with a view to assure themselves of viewer ship and ratings.
The artists will have to compete in groups of fours and
create in-situ. They will be judged by an expert panel, while voting by SMS and
phone calls will decide their fate. Depending on the availability of some of
the well-known artists, the first round will feature about 80 artists.
In the first few primary rounds, the artists will be asked
to show off their skills. As the rounds progress, the tasks will become more
complex until finally it will boil down to cerebral activity. Asked why it
could not be done the other way around, one of the producers said that it would
be imprudent, as the number of rounds will greatly diminish and this could
affect the Art-Mart Index adversely.


5 comments:
Suspiciously well thought out 8-)
Brilliantly original!
Thanks Pathikrit and Kunal :)
Indian Art League (IAL)seems to be quite proper in the context of today's business. Looking forward to more such leagues in the coming days and eager to hear about 'art fixing'.
interesting...
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