Economic Liberalisation in India
1991–2000
Largely closed since Independence as a form of protection against overseas private interests that may have sought to control its fragile post-colonial economy, India eventually opens to foreign investment in 1991, making the country subject, at least in part, to economic trends typical of globalisation.
Once collectors and institutions abroad gain wider commercial access to Indian art, prices for contemporary and especially Modernist art go up, cautiously, at first, and then with speed. This sparks an academic interest in cultural production amidst the newly opened, fast-growing Indian economy, allowing for financial speculation on contemporary Indian art.
Bibliography
Adajania, Nancy. “New Media Overtures Before New Media Practice in India.” In Art and Visual Culture in India, 1857-2007, edited by Gayatri Sinha, 266–81. Mumbai: Marg, 2009.
Ciotti, Manuela. “Post-Colonial Renaissance: ‘Indianness’, Contemporary Art and the Market in the Age of Neoliberal Capital.” Third World Quarterly 33 no. 4 (April 2012): 633–51.
Feedback 
This entry appears in
Art in South Asia
Visit TimelineAssociated Timeline Events
First Published: March 11, 2024
Last Updated: May 22, 2024