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How well do you know your art?
Let’s try a more feasible question: where do you see most art?
For many years now, hotels, resorts and other beacons of the hospitality industry in the country have been known to be robust supporters of the art fraternity. Most mid to high-end hotel spaces you visit will have an array of artworks on display for anyone who comes visiting.
This is perhaps a necessity today, as the country’s art industry in recent times has been performing poorly.
However, not all artists are delighted with the way hotels pick and choose art –
Dennis S, a Bengaluru-based artist, echoes Lath:
Their consensus? Hotels do play a huge role in contributing to the Indian art fraternity, but the young and the struggling are yet to find a place.
Not everyone paints a gloomy picture though.
Bengaluru-based artist Sunita Patel still remembers the day when her work was displayed at Le Meridian for the first time.
She says her collection of paintings were focused on provoking emotions and managed to strike a chord with a lot of visitors and art lovers. “My paintings are a reflection of my mood. I forget everything around me while I am splashing colours on paper. It is like being transported to a different world altogether,” she said.
Meera Gyanchand, who creates illustrations around gender equality and injustice against women, insisted that her paintings – when displayed at an exhibition by Bengaluru’s Windsor Manor a few years ago – had resonated powerfully with art lovers.
Of late, hotels and resorts across Bengaluru have made it a point to display pieces of art and sculpture as part of their décor.
When asked about providing opportunities for young artists, Nikita Raghuvanshi, the Assistant Marketing Manager Sheraton Grand in Bengaluru, pointed out that the hotel had recently opened an exclusive art café within the property to make art more accessible to the masses.
Ritz Carlton, on the other hand, has displayed over 1,000 paintings across the property – most of which symbolise stories of ancient India. The hotel recently organised the series, ‘A Journey Through Art’ curated by the Asian Art House involving the display of contemporary artists like Amit Bhar, Paramesh Paul.
Says Gargi Guha, Director of Public Relations, Ritz Carlton:
Hotels generally have certain specifications when it comes to the kind of art that they want to display. This is one of the main reasons they tend to be choosy about the paintings they exhibit.
Besides, another criterion that is looked into while taking decisions is how well the art can blend with the décor and interiors.
Such selection is usually done, according to Guha, “either by the senior management or an external art consultant whom we hire.”
The current art scenario, clearly, is a tricky one. While the hospitality industry is certainly making sure more and more art is, at least, seen by their visitors, the young and the struggling continue to yearn for opportunities.
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