HERITAGE: SAYING IT WITH FLOWERS
It wasn’t that long ago that the rear door of a goods truck painted with a couple of bright green parakeets with ruby red beaks and perched atop a tree sprouting shocking pink flowers overlooking a valley with the bluest of rivers flowing, evoked remarks of “gaudy” or “cheap” art. The colours, it was said, were so bright they hurt the eyes!
But today, even high-end designer labels come up with expensive truck art T-shirts which the young find appealing. Such clothes are a must-have for their wardrobe, just like they want the bags and shoes sporting similar designs. And even at kiosks at a mall, you will come across a lady dauntlessly bargaining with a stall owner for a small blue-and-yellow teapot decorated in floral truck art design. The adamant shopkeeper won’t sell it for less than 1,000 rupees. “Truck art in Urdu is ‘phool patti’,” says Ali Salman Anchan, founder and creative director of Phool Patti, a social enterprise. “A truck driver bringing a new truck to the artists will say, ‘Phool patti ker do.’ That’s what this indigenous art genre of Pakistan has been referred to over the years,” he says.