Updated On: 12 April, 2021 08:07 PM IST | Mumbai | Nascimento Pinto
After a beer brand covered Bandra`s popular Madhubala and Anarkali murals with an ad, the artist community weighs in on questions around the ownership and conservation of wall art

Sajid Wajid Shaikh`s mural in Delhi. Photo: Sajid Wajid Shaikh
What can stop murals on Mumbai’s streets from being painted over? Very little, it turns out.
But the case for preserving these wide-open works of art has only been gaining ground. “When it is in a public space, art is also ‘owned’ by the public because it has its own value. It is an equity and landmark in itself,” city-based contemporary artist Sajid Wajid Shaikh points out. “The only way to protect the art is to educate people who are in the vicinity.” The value of a property goes up, for instance, when the British artist Banksy paints on its wall.