INDIAN tax authorities yesterday (26) raised about £6 million ($8m) in an auction of rare oil paintings that were once part of fugitive billionaire jeweller Nirav Modi's collection and seized by the government.
Tax authorities who are pursuing Modi in connection with the country's largest bank fraud appointed auction house Saffronart to carry out the sale of 68 works.
Auctioneers say the sale, which was originally expected to raise up to £5.53m ($7.3m), was the first of its kind in a country where tax authorities have usually auctioned property, gold and luxury items, but not art.
"Until a few years ago, the tax authorities really didn't know the value of art," said Farah Siddiqui, an art adviser who advised clients eyeing Modi's collection.
The 48-year-old Modi, whose diamonds have sparkled on Hollywood stars, is one of the prime accused in a £1.51 billion loan fraud at state-run Punjab National Bank.
Modi denies the charges and says they are politically motivated.
Modi was arrested last week by British authorities and remanded in custody after he appeared before a London court. India asked Britain last August to extradite Modi.
An oil painting by Raja Ravi Varma, a 19th century painter considered among India's finest, fetched the taxman £1.74m, while another by modernist VS Gaitonde raised £2.80m.
Over 80 per cent of the works on auction were sold, Saffronart chief executive Dinesh Vazirani said.
India Law Alliance, the law firm representing the company controlled by Modi that owned the art, is challenging the court order that allowed the auction. The case will be heard by the Bombay High Court on Wednesday (27).
(Reuters)