In agreement about the refreshing and changing buyer response is Mandira Lamba of the South Asia focus gallery Blueprint12, currently celebrating its 10th anniversary, who was initially apprehensive of showing at this fair edition, but is glad to have risked it and had "super response" on all 10 artists. The dainty etched imageries on used books by Nepalese paper artist Youdhisthir Maharjan, all four works by Meghna Gavireddygari with political undertones, Vipeksha Gupta's charcoal and graphite works on paper from her FOLD series, and largescale work by Sri Lankan artist Kingsley Gunatillake have all been bought. "The highlight of this year is the vengeance with which young, dynamic high networking individuals (HNIs) have visited and and really supported the artists. They are very experimental, have done their research but don't come with preconceived notions of how an artwork should be." This mindset has helped in forging sales for the Integrated Arts Forum, that Blueprint 12 runs in collaboration with Exhibit 320, and which saw sales for their collection of tribal art works and textile traditions. "We had zero expectations from this booth because if we had foreign collectors who are usually attracted to traditional works for their exotic aura, but again the young Indian collectors surprised us." Her personal highlight is the sale of two largescale Warli artworks by Sada Shiv and Balu Mashe, sons of the late National Award winning artist, Jiyve Some Mashe.