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The afterlife of galleries

<p>When galleries shut down, as they have done in recent years in the city, what happens next? Gallerists and the artists that they once represented talk to us about surviving the dip and continuing their art practice</p>

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The first Indian artist that Abhay Maskara signed on for his gallery in 2008, a little before the bankruptcy of the Lehman Brothers, was T Venkanna. Maskara had been making studio visits on a short stay in Baroda earlier that year. "I still remember how it felt. I was exhausted at the end of those two days; a majority of the art I had seen wasn't uplifting. I had one last studio to visit. The artist told me he was sick but decided to meet me anyway when he got to know I was leaving the next day," Maskara recalls. In that tiny studio, he met 29-year-old Venkanna for the first time. Maskara describes the setting as one in which cupboards and corners were bursting at the seams with his drawings. "My enthusiasm was palpable.

Artist T Venkanna's first exhibition, For Identity, at Gallery Maskara in 2009
Artist T Venkanna's first exhibition, For Identity, at Gallery Maskara in 2009

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