NON-FICTION: LIVING CULTURE
For centuries, interior decoration was the hobby of gifted amateurs — ladies of leisure, fastidious houseowners and under-occupied dilettantes. The mantra was simple: have space, will decorate. Two world wars, changes in patterns of domestic living, devolved income patterns in the hands of the emerging middle classes and the evolution of a new species of niche professionals changed all that.
Suddenly, it was not enough to talk airily about interior decoration. One had to be specific. There is a difference between interior decoration and interior design, asserts Naheed Mashooqullah, president of the Pakistan Institute of Interior Designers (PIID), in her introduction both to the subject and to a sumptuous volume, Interior Design of Pakistan — I, brought out by the PIID some time ago. “Interior design is still thought to be synonymous with interior decoration,” she says in gentle remonstrance. “The reality is quite different. It takes many years of university training and extensive working experience to develop skills required to be an interior designer. One has to be exposed to electrical and mechanical systems, structural implications, spatial connections and much more. In addition to all the engineering, there is the knowledge of materials and finishes, furnishings, accessories and a well-rounded knowledge of art and architecture.” The live element is the touch that only a human mind can provide: “A good interior designer will take all these ingredients and add a touch of magic by making spaces memorable.”
As any self-respecting chef will tell you, simply assembling and mixing ingredients is not enough. Like a well-baked cake, “a good interior is more than the sum of its parts,” James Soane adds in his magisterial foreword. He obviously belongs to the tradition that produced the likes of Edwin Lutyens who (with William Baker) designed New Delhi, and Le Corbusier who designed Chandigarh. “Architects seem to have forgotten that they too designed interiors to be lived in rather than just be photographed! I always like to remind people that the famous Modernist architect Le Corbusier was happy designing entire cities as well as choosing carpets, curtains and painting walls pink.”
Interior decoration is to architecture what nacre is to an oyster: within an outer shell lies the pearl.
Lutyens designed everything in his showpiece — the Viceroy’s House (now the Rashtrapati Bhavan): the grand durbar hall, the reception areas, the gardens, the fountains, the bathrooms, even the children’s bedroom. His attention to detail was nothing less than microscopic. An extreme example was the hanging lamps in the nursery that had white shades like shells protecting egg-shaped light bulbs.
A post-Independence generation of Indians inherited an almost unlimited cultural tradition. By comparison, Pakistan’s design evolution could not have been slower. It took more than 50 years for interior design to be given corporate recognition, and rather like other professional guilds such as the Bar Associations or the Institute of Chartered Accountants, it followed British models. Danish Zuby, a founder-member of the PIID, narrates his experience in establishing it: “I thought it was an easy task, not aware of the rough road ahead. The phase between 1998 and 2001 was the most difficult and crucial. Getting committed designers to meet over a cup of tea for PIID was quite a task.”
After three years of dogged effort, in 2001, PIID was officially recognised and its birth announced in the press. In 2010, the PIID moved up one notch — it became part of the National Design Council.