United Kingdom

Indian investor buys lifetime rights to reclusive Italian artist

Work by Americo Montanari will form basis of art fund
Montanari, Il Piacere del Nulla, 1985

LONDON. The rights to the entire life’s work of an Italian artist who has lived in seclusion for the past 18 years has been bought by an Indian investor. Arun Rangachari, chairman of venture capital firm DAR Capital, said he is building up an art collection with the intention of setting up an art fund in the future.

“I don’t know anything about art at the moment. I’ve just started learning,” said Rangachari whose other business interests range from media technology and commercial agriculture to adventure sports, Bollywood films and the theatrical rights to the Indian Premier League (ie showing cricket on large screens in public venues).

His first art investment consists of 40 paintings by the Italian artist Americo Montanari, with the option to buy many more. Montanari, 73, has exhibited his work only once, in Milan in the early 1980s. He then became a recluse, spending his days painting in a villa in Biella in the Piedmont region. He left his home only six times in 18 years, relying on his wife for food and other necessities.

“He felt the art world was too commercial for him so he retreated into almost complete isolation,” says Raja Khara, Rangachari’s partner in the art venture who discovered Montanari and his huge collection of unseen work when he noticed a “for sale” sign in front of the artist’s villa. “He had decided the place was too big for him and he couldn’t look after it properly any more,” said Khara, who bought the property from the artist and now lives in it.

Rangachari said he intends to build Montanari’s reputation before attempting to sell any of his work. The artist’s paintings are now being catalogued and there are plans for a foundation devoted to the artist which will be built on a property in front of the villa where Montanari lived for 18 years. This will include 3,000 sq. ft of display space for the artist’s work.

Rangachari says he also intends to stage an exhibition of paintings by Montanari in London later this year. Three international exhibitions will follow in 2011.

In addition to the money spent on the Italian artist’s work, Rangachari said he intends to invest “probably £8m to £10m” on art.

“The value creation that art affords the investor without the investor having to do anything is phenomenal. Art and real estate are the only two assets that have this dynamic. We’ve invested heavily in real estate. This seemed like the ideal opportunity,” he said.

When asked why his art fund would succeed when other ventures, including Indian-based funds, had recently failed he said: “Our entry level will be affordable, we’ll be focussing on artists who have not yet built a reputation and we will have no hidden costs, everything will be up front, so we’ll be quite different from everyone else.”


Arun Rangachari
More from The Art Newspaper

Comments

13 Oct 11
18:24 CET

PRASH SANKHE, DUBAI

I completely agree with Raffaele Micheletti, nobody has the right to judge art, because it is an individual expression, only the artist himself can judge it. I wish all the best to the people behind this venture and wish them great success for bringing forth the art of Americo Montanari.

21 Feb 11
17:27 CET

KIRTI KHATRI, PATAN ,INDIA

i am an paper cutting artist in india i am only one person to make this art since 45 years

13 Oct 10
16:51 CET

THERESE, BRUSSELS

I certainly agree with Lucy: "The attitude that is expressed in the comments above is what gives art a bad name. Rangachari may be learning but that does not invalidate the art or the fund." At least 'outsider' artists can be supported, even if more idealistic types are disillusioned with the idea of a cut-throat, speculative art market. It would also be nice if this gentleman could promote some Indian artists (including women)! However, he may already do so, as I have not performed any background research, but I for one, would like to see more diversity in practice.

20 Aug 10
23:25 CET

LAURA CASARSA, UDINE

I agree with mr. Micheletti. I'm a student of economy and management of the arts in Venice and i'd like to know more about Montanari.Mr. Micheletti coul you please help me? How can i contact him?

20 Jul 10
18:53 CET

RAFFAELE MICHELETTI, VALLE SAN NICOLAO - BIELLA

I have the chance to leve just a few km from the house of Montanari. Actualy I am the Mayor of the village. I had the possibility to see most of the artworkd of the painter and comparing them with other painters I know, using my knowledge of this side of the art. He is unique and comparing him with other painters is the wrong comment that evrybody can do. He is himself. Judge him only.

17 Jul 10
20:59 CET

EBUN, LONDON

I keep writing,painting,producing music,as I battle with health and life that give me more material - I am driven by a brain that never ceases to interpret creatively. A blessing, because without it joy may not find me and a curse because I can never keep up with myslef. FInding a patron who truely loves your work however, is a blessing I too dream of. Find me too please,

12 Jul 10
19:57 CET

MISTY, DFW

I agree with Lucy of London. Unknown Or unschooled doesn't mean of no value. Let the passion be what captivated you. Wish someone would do this for my work. Look me up on Facebook. Modern Art By Misty Lemons.

12 Jul 10
16:49 CET

JERRY T.T., BRONX, NY

When the time comes, all he has to do is come to the good ol' USA to promote and sell his new found artist. We love all things that bring a good story with it. As Mencken said, "No one ever went broke underestimating the taste of the American public."

12 Jul 10
16:48 CET

DR. KRISHNA KUMARI CHALLA, HYDERABAD, INDIA

I am doing research on art collectors. Most of the art collectors I meet say they don't know much about art. They just buy something because they like the work. I posted a paper on types of art collectors on my network. Some take advice from "experts" but how much the experts themselves know about art is a big Q mark. Most people promote artists for money & not for the sake of art! Here in the art world everything depends on perception & not proof. So Mr. Rangachari is a typical art collector or lover. I don't understand what the fuss is all about!

7 Jul 10
17:14 CET

MANISH AGAIN, NEW YORK, NY

It's me again. Lucy, I'm not sure if you understood my earlier comment. I'm advocating buying art because you love art and making investments in things you know about. Rangachari's lack of knowledge of art doesn't completely invalidate the fund, but it does raise serious alarms. Do George Soros or Warren Buffet invest in things they don't know? No, they don't. Amy, Charles Saatchi didn't just bet on a group and he turned up lucky. He staged an exhibition, Sensation, and put those artists in established museums and institutions around the world giving them credibility. He picked artists from a top British school. He created headlines with the show that gave the artists and the exhibition recognition. He worked it. Even still, Saatchi is more of an exception than the norm. But in the end you are right, a lot of it is about taking a chance in something you feel strongly about.

7 Jul 10
16:46 CET

AMY, NEWQUAY

I think a lot of art investing can be down to chance-taking a risk for something you feel strongly about. Take Saatchi for example. He took on unknown British artists fresh out of college and has become one of the most successful contemporary art investors since. He never listened to critics nor cared about what anyone else thought as long as he liked the pieces. Granted, this is rare, but it can work. I think it’s refreshing to have a capital investment company embrace art rather than disregarding it. After all, art can mean big business.

7 Jul 10
15:51 CET

LUCY, LONDON

The attitude that is expressed in the comments above is what gives art a bad name. Rangachari may be learning but that does not invalidate the art or the fund. Art is about passion – and that is no bad thing in the current climate. Look at Leopold – he was ridiculed for investing in Schiele yet now they are both celebrated.

7 Jul 10
15:49 CET

PETER SALK, WILMINGTON, DELAWARE

Very interesting work. A real - meaning real art fund is needed after all the recent ones - can understand the sarcastic comment. Need to see more work and study the deal. Which Dar Capital? Does someone know.

7 Jul 10
7:56 CET

MANISH, NEW YORK, NY

This will undoubtedly fail. Why will he succeed? Because he will have no hidden costs? Yeah, that's the reason why most naive investors in art fail, because of all the hidden costs! (note my sarcasm) In investing there's the simple motto of "Invest in what you know." This guy admits out of the gate he knows nothing. Awesome. Oh, he's going to buy up artists who don't yet have a reputation. Then what? He's going to build up their reputation? That's typically the job of a gallery not an art fund. Building up an artist's reputation is no simple task, especially one that is towards the end of their career. Especially when the primary driving force is an art investment fund. And if he's looking to cash in on some Outsider Art movement I think that boat has already sailed. Henry Darger called, he wants his shtik back.

6 Jul 10
22:37 CET

PABLO, ARTWORLD

Well seeing the work in reproduction. It looks like he's just another Picasso wannabe.

Submit a comment

Please provide your email address. This is in case we wish to contact you - it will not be made public and we do not use it for any other purpose.

Email*
 
Name*
 
City*
 
Comment*
 

Share this

Vauxhall
Astra