If India Art Fair had a first ball of the season, this would be it. The night everyone pretends is casual but secretly schedules around. Inside Golf Links, at the 20,000-square-foot home of Shalini Passi, the fair begins not with speeches or previews but with a party that behaves like theatre.
You know it the moment you walk in. Sculptures stand guard at the entrance, gently informing you that this is not a shoes-off, sink-into-the-sofa situation. Past the foyer, the house opens into a sweeping lawn shaped by a crescent façade on one side and dense trees on the other. Sit anywhere and look up and it feels like a dome. There is mist on the grass, fire pits glowing, and stars that seem almost fictional for Delhi. Somewhere next door, a golf club connects with a ball, like an accidental sound cue.
At the centre of the lawn sits a Buddha head by Subodh Gupta, calm to the point of indifference as the art world orbits it with drinks in hand. Bars appear exactly when and where you need them, which is intentional. This is not a party that believes in long walks between cocktails. Conversations overlap. Near the back of the lawn, someone points at a suspiciously functional-looking object and whispers, “No, no, that’s not a seating.” A pause. “Or is it?” Nobody sits. Nobody wants to be wrong.
Inside, the house leans fully into its museum identity. A Ravinder Reddy head stops people mid-stride. A curator announces, with conviction, that it is their favourite piece. Works by Anita Dube and LN Tallur appear in passages and corners, prompting frequent halts and whispered commentary. Even the washrooms refuse to behave. One features a 2009 inkjet print mounted on a lightbox by Daniele Buetti, turning a bathroom break into a gallery visit and a mirror selfie into a cultural requirement. Someone suggests, only half joking, that you could throw a parallel party in there. Outside, Atul Dodiya wanders past the shuttle works he made for Passi years ago. “She commissioned these ages ago,” he says, laughing, before disappearing back into conversation. His wife, Anju Dodiya, is nearby, deep in discussion. Around them, art fair murmurs ripple. Is it sold already? Not yet? Give it a day.














