Old Bollywood posters for sale in Goa

Panaji, Dec 3 (IANS) An Italian-Polish couple based in Goa has been carefully collecting film posters from across India, mainly of Bollywood, that take you back to another time.

Called &#39Colonial Photo&#39, the collection is about a bygone era when Bollywood films had their own black-and-white tales to tell.

Italian Silvio Ciancia, based in Arpora village, has put together an amazing collection of British-era and Bollywood photographs which he also duplicates as collector&#39s items and sells to tourists visiting Goa.

His Polish-English wife, Greta Wilkinson, who trained as a social anthropologist and wanted to get into art herself, looks after the Tabra Arts and adds value to this venture.

&#39This is only a fraction of my collection. There are lots more,&#39 he said showing around his old-style Goan villa.

&#39I&#39m on the lookout for (posters of) strange movies. I&#39m not much concerned about those films that are too famous. For &#39Mother India&#39 or &#39Sholay&#39, I don&#39t care,&#39 Ciancia told IANS. &#39I&#39m trying to get the kitsch of Bollywood.

&#39People go crazy over lobby cards (showing photos of actors and actresses). But the prices have gone up. What you could buy 10 years ago for Rs.25 in Chor Bazaar (Mumbai) now costs $25,&#39 he said.

Ciancia found some good sources for old posters on eBay, the online sell-anything website. He estimates he has over a thousand subjects with him.

He scans the posters, makes a paper copy, and puts them through matt lamination after painting the original.

&#39Some tourists, like the Russians, love that tarty lady,&#39 he points to one poster.

&#39Bollywood has some beautiful old movies too. Now, Bollywood makes a lot of films. Maybe, it could make less but of better quality,&#39 he added.

Calling his collection an outcome of a passion for art, he said: &#39It&#39s primarily not a business. I&#39m not here to become rich.&#39

The collection has made the couple celebrities in Goa. &#39We&#39re featured in an article on &#39Goa&#39s best kept secrets&#39,&#39 Ciancia said.

In his house one can find the posters of yesteryear stars like Helen, Junior Mehmood, Fearless Nadia, and an Australian woman who married an Indian producer in the 1940s and became prominent in Bollywood.

Ciancia has been collecting the film posters for long, working on them, getting artistes from Milano and elsewhere to do them up, and then sell copies to tourists visiting Goa who are keen to have a brush with India.

What he offers for sale also includes old Indian photos, Japanese ones and Bollywood pictures from the 1940s. There are originals too, while others are printed on paper, canvas or big-size posters.

On his first trip to Rajasthan nearly a decade ago, he discovered there were a huge number of old photographs still available in some places.

He toured all over India and started to buy. His dealer, based in that legendary used-goods market with the suggestive name of &#39Chor Bazaar&#39 in Mumbai, used to come to Goa once a month with offers.

&#39It&#39s now getting difficult to find good photographs. But there are interesting things from Bollywood. They&#39ve tried everything (in the Indian film industry). From a remake of &#39Jurassic Park&#39 to old movies; they&#39ve even tried Frankenstein and Robin Hood.&#39

Sometimes, he said, there are &#39too many Kapoors and too many Kumars&#39 in the Indian film industry, making it a bit difficult for him to keep track.

&#39Over the years, the price of photos has become so high. Good classic subjects sell for 10 to 20 times more over seven years.&#39

Sometimes, the price asked for in Mumbai today is comparable to what is being sought in prominent auction houses like Christie&#39s in London, he said.

Ciancia discovered that there is a &#39huge market&#39 for copies of such photographs and posters. He sells at the Saturday night markets held in Goa, at Arpora village itself, during the tourist season.

Foreign tourists visiting Goa find the Bollywood posters a suitable souvenir. &#39Colonial India&#39 does have a &#39desi&#39 market too, with some going in for the maharaja (king) pictures.

He also collects advertisements and photos of maharajas.

Ciancia pointed out that some of his black-and-white photographs have been re-touched and coloured in the fashion of the 1930s. One of the posters from Bollywood is of the film &#39Johar Mehmood in Goa&#39.

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