Sotheby's Taps Into Indian Art Market Boom With Sales of ₹304 Cr in 2024
Mint Bangalore
|February 18, 2025
Risk-taking younger collectors, both from India and abroad, drive demand, representatives of the gallery said
Demand for Indian art is booming, as savvy millennials and high net worth individuals (HNIs) rush to pick up works of both modernist masters like Sayed Haider Raza, and Vasudeo S. Gaitonde as well as lesser-known painters such as Bhupen Khakhar, driving record sales. London's Sotheby's, the world's oldest auction house, has emerged as a top performer in the Indian art market in 2024, more than doubling its sales to ₹304 crore or $35.1 million by auctioning artworks from the portfolio of contemporary South Asian art.
Representatives of the gallery said that growth is promising, with paintings of Raza, Gaitonde and Tyeb Mehta setting new benchmarks as risk-taking younger collectors, both from India and abroad, drive demand. The gallery, in its autumn 2024 sale, made ₹127.57 crore ($14.69 million).
In an exclusive interview with Mint, New York-based Manjari Sihare-Sutin, vice-president and co-worldwide head of modern and contemporary South Asian Art at Sotheby's, said there is a strong evolution of India's art market as domestic collectors are getting younger, with more HNIs and millennials investing in art.
Dit verhaal komt uit de February 18, 2025-editie van Mint Bangalore.
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