Bid & Hammer comments on Kishore Singh’s article ‘The curious
case of Suruchi Chand’ This is in response to the calculatedly
defamatory article “The curious case of Suruchi Chand” (December 1)
by Kishore Singh. Notwithstanding the amateurish contents, which
were best ignored, as the writer desired a clarification, it is
only befitting to expose the truth. There are many self-styled
experts on art and auctions in India and Singh is one of the more
infamous ones, writing under the guise of a bipartisan art
journalist while actually working as the mouthpiece of a Delhi art
gallery. There is no denying these facts, which are increasingly
perturbing the wider “collectorati” who have grown tired of this
unholy syndicate of some select galleries, curators and critics,
who wrongfully consider knowledge of art to be their private doyen
and the business of art as their sole proprietorship. Needless to
say, the emergence of open auctions of significant works, at
reasonable estimates, unnerves these coteries. Before calling
Singh’s bluff and to re-iterate a known fact, the promoters of Bid
& Hammer have an impeccable record and are able to confidently
put up works in a publicised live auction only because of our
in-depth expertise, clear provenance, and, above all, a clear
conscience. Hence, to date, we have not had to withdraw any works
from any of our auctions or previews conducted in Delhi, Chennai
and Bangalore. Thus, it is dubious for Singh to question the
credibility of the works that were meant to have gone up for sale
at our November 30 auction (incidentally it is being re-scheduled
for mid-February 2011). In this context, to address his
make-believe concerns on the authenticity of the works, it would be
best if he first checks that the 1984 work by Souza, put up by
Saffronart, is indeed a genuine work and why and how it resembles a
three-decade-old work by the same artist. How does Suruchi Chand
come into the picture here? Does the 1984 work even remotely
resemble Suruchi Chand? Coming to the crux of the matter, we assert
that the 1956 work is an original work and any later painting
resembling this work in part or full can logically have two
conclusions: one, that the artist could have done a variation of
the theme and two, that it is an absolute fake. Strangely, on the
basis of Singh’s observations, another 1956 work by the same artist
in watercolour, depicting the Crucifixion of Christ and estimated
at Rs 45-60 lakh, should cast doubts on the authenticity of a
similar 1961 work done in oil and claimed to have been sold by
Saffronart for Rs 2.75 crore in 2005. Continuing his impertinence,
Singh found Roerich’s “particular style” in the “Monk in the
Himalaya” painting “unfamiliar”. To view Nicholas Roerich’s
paintings in the same style, one has just to click on
www.roerich.org. Incidentally, the preview was held at the Russian
Embassy and was inaugurated by H E Alexander Kadakin who is also
Director of the Roerich Museum in Moscow. Rabindranath Tagore never
painted from models. His paintings were expressions of his own deep
inner states. Therefore, the faces are stylised with elongated nose
and features. His intent was not to paint different faces but to
convey a state of inner being. That explains why many of the faces
have a stylistic resemblance. We challenge Singh to specifically
name the painting, supposedly in the NGMA collection, with which he
compares the “Face of a lady” and finds an “uncanny” resemblance.
The History of Art is a serious study and auction houses like ours
invest a large chunk of our resources in it. Hence, such loose
comments are deplorable and shameful. The Ravi Varma paintings came
with a detailed and unimpeachable provenance running into several
lines and covering decades of ownership, including the
Archaeological Survey of India’s registration details. Does Singh
find more “due diligence by way of provenance” in single-line
references like “thought to have been acquired by”, which his
favourite auctioneers use? Singh conjectured these issues without
so much as inspecting the paintings. Bid & Hammer is aware of
its responsibility to the art fraternity and its own reputation. We
have our own group of reliable experts and we prefer to work
directly with individual consignors, reputable institutes and
buyers in a transparent manner without getting absorbed in this
conundrum of artificially jacking up prices. The already troubled
Indian art market definitely does not need peddlers of fabricated
and misleading news. Public Relations Team, Bid & Hammer
Kishore Singh replies: The Bid & Hammer team has made several
personal allegations against this columnist that are not worthy of
response. However, an important observation is its more specific
charge that some Souza works auctioned earlier by Saffronart (see
images alongside) are suspected to be fakes. This is one among the
several rumours around counterfeits that find wide currency in the
market but are rarely reported by the media because neither art
scholars nor experts are willing to hedge their bets and actually
label works as forgeries since the burden of providing evidence,
whether to prove the authenticity of a work, or its rip-off, will
fall on them. This columnist is, therefore, delighted that Bid
& Hammer has raised this issue because it is precisely this
sort of debate that needs to be taken up by the art fraternity, and
which has been a cause of grave concern among both collectors and
investors. I thank Bid & Hammer for opening a pandora’s box on
this debate and hope the resulting discussions in the industry will
result in either some regulatory framework, or bring it together on
a common platform to legislate issues by way of an ombudsman. This
columnist holds no candle for any particular form of art, or
artists, auction houses or galleries, and just as it has been
critical of their pricing (both too low and too high), the
selection of art, auctioning procedures and provenance, so it has
been supportive of and devoted column space to Bid & Hammer’s
previous auctions, including a recent one on antiquarian books,
maps, prints and photographs, which can be reviewed at
www.business-standard.com, and which anyone would find impossible
to term in any manner partisan or biased. Therefore, in sharing the
concern of senior scholars, restorers and experts regarding the
similarity or provenance of some works to be auctioned at its
re-scheduled sale (in itself, an unusual aberration) , but in no
way validating their claim, this column does not attempt to
undermine Bid & Hammer’s efforts to create a more rigorous art
market or environment. If, however, the result of these letters
helps in clearing the murky universe of dealings in spurious art,
then this columnist will acknowledge Bid & Hammer’s efforts,
and support, in this direction.
http://www.business-standard.com/india/news/suruchi-chand-revisited/420741/
You need to be a member of Talk Art to add comments!
Join Talk Art