

Alexander Keefe is a Delhi-based independent critic and writer. He has written for Matters of Art, Camerawork Delhi, the Nature Morte Gallery and the Guild Gallery. He writes regularly at jugaadoo.blogspot.com. He did graduate work in Sanskrit and Persian at Harvard University, worked in the Indian Art department at the Sackler Gallery there and carried out research in India as a Fulbright fellow. He has taught critical theory and Asian religions at Ohio University and has divided his time between the United States and India since the early '90s.
Ganieve Grewal has been Christie's representative in India since September 2005. Grewal graduated from the University of Delhi in 1996 before gaining a Diploma in Fine and Decorative Arts from Christie's Education in London. From 1997 to 2005, Grewal has worked in a number of galleries, in an artists' workshop as well as in the charity sector.
Laura Williams is an art historian specialising in art from South Asia. Her early research focused on art produced in the Indian sub-continent during the 18th and 19th centuries. Following a BA in Art History and an MA in World Art, she is currently a Visiting Fellow at the School of World Art Studies, University of East Anglia, UK. Her in-progress PhD research focuses on Contemporary art practice in India since the 1980s. Art 18/21, an art gallery promoting Contemporary South Asian art was opened by Williams at the beginning of this year in Norwich, UK.
Maithili Parekh is Deputy Director at Sotheby's, focusing on Indian Art and Business Development for Global Indian Communities. Parekh has studied Art History and International Relations at Brown University, USA. Prior to her involvement in the art world, she worked on Wall Street at Morgan Stanley. Parekh has since worked with Indian art galleries in Mumbai and New York. She was instrumental in the education programmes for the exhibition Edge of Desire: Recent Art in India at the NGMA (Mumbai and Delhi). Parekh lives between Mumbai and London.
Niharika Dinkar studied at the National Museum in New Delhi before completing her doctoral studies in modern Indian visual history from SUNY Stony Brook in 2006. She is currently a Getty Fellow at the Asia Society in New York. She also holds a position as Assistant Professor at Boise State University where she teaches art history and visual culture. Her research has explored the reception of Enlightenment visual paradigms in nineteenth century India focusing on the figure of Raja Ravi Varma.
Victoria Chaine-Mendrzyk graduated with a BA in Fine Art and History of Art from Goldsmiths College, University of London, and with a BA in Philosophy from University of Paris X, Nanterre. She is now in the final year of the Curating Contemporary Art MA at the Royal College of Art, London.
She has worked at Beaux-Arts magazine, at the Grand-Palais and at the Maison Rouge in Paris, at the Sundaram Tagore Gallery in New York and at the Documenta 12, Kassel and Deichtorhallen, Hamburg in Germany.