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All about the Monet

I had mixed feelings when I saw Claude Monet on the walls selling at a discount of 25 per cent and his Poppyfield-Argenteuil selling as a card at a discount of 20 per cent. But then I banished the thought.

Updated on: Jul 24, 2009 09:45 PM IST
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I had mixed feelings when I saw Claude Monet on the walls selling at a discount of 25 per cent and his Poppyfield-Argenteuil selling as a card at a discount of 20 per cent. But then I banished the thought.

HT Image
HT Image

There is much to be said for beautiful things and the Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York has opened, interestingly enough, not its museum or an art gallery, but its first store in India. And the Empire is buying back.

Store No. 1 is on the ground floor of the Select City Walk mall in Saket. “We plan to open five more stores — two in Bangalore and Mumbai each and one in Hyderabad — within the next month,” says Tarun Khanna, CEO of The Met in India. Why must we source our own things like Buddha busts and Mughal ornaments from an American museum and buy them at such high prices? “Indian museums offer nothing to Indian businessmen,” said Khanna. “When it comes from America, we are sure of its value.”

“The Hatshepsut Sphinx is at least 60 feet high. You get yours for 12 inches,” points out Khanna.

A bit of unsolicited advice: do not bargain. And do not keep what you buy next to the ceramic ducks on the third rack of your wall cabinet.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Paramita Ghosh

Paramita Ghosh has been working as a journalist for over 20 years and writes socio-political and culture features. She works in the Weekend section as a senior assistant editor and has reported from Vienna, Jaffna and Singapore.

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