"It has, in the process, raised Indian art to a global level," he said while delivering a special address at the closing ceremony of the second Kochi-Muziris Biennale (KMB) which will formally conclude on Sunday evening with the lowering of the flag at the main Aspinwall House venue.
Noting that the 108-day festival has mainly exhibited 100 works by 94 artistes from 30 countries, the Governor said a students' and children's biennale held as part of KMB'14 had the potential to churn out a new generation of top-class artists from Kerala and rest of the country.
The closing ceremony, which was presided over by Kerala Culture Minister K C Joseph amid the presence of his cabinet colleague K Babu, was also addressed by legislators Thomas Isaac and Dominic Presentation.
In his presidential address, Joseph expressed happiness that a deluge of criticism that plagued the first edition of the biennale in 2012 had "completely vanished" two years later by when the ongoing KMB began in December 12, 2014.