By Team IAnD
Photography: Courtesy the
designer
Interior
and furniture designer Lalit Hira is back at the London Design Festival 2015 –
this time with a photo installation based on the brass tacks of Indian
design...
Titled
“Simply a way of Life”, the installation is a philosophical reference of Lalit’s sensibilities as an interior and
furniture designer. It focuses on varied aspects of the Indian lifestyle with particular
reference to frugal, eco-friendly or environmentally green design in products,
interiors and the building industry, and the Indian qualities of being simultaneously ingenious and
sustainable.
©DinodiaPhotoLibrary
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The designer delves into aeons-old Hindu scriptures and traditional ways to draw from them a handful
that ascribe to a simple way of living. He questions whether these practices
were sustainable and close to eco-friendly, frugal or green terminology that is
being increasingly advocated.
©DinodiaPhotoLibrary
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©DinodiaPhotoLibrary
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After probing and
filtering, he handpicks a smattering of examples that fit the bill and presents
these findings in his installation via postcards - pictorial representations of
the Indian way of life using examples from music, home decor, building
materials, food and apparel, earthenware, straw thatches, cow dung cakes, rangolis, lippan work, charpoi,
hindola, pulppaya, padukas and the like. Forty photographic references and
five live examples urge the visitors to scratch the surface, unearth the
dormant, and revisit the profound.
Model of the installation base - the havan kund simulation |
In his attempt at
touching the roots of Indianness and questioning the status quo of global
terminology and its true origin, he recreates one staunch example of frugal
design – a metaphoric display - the Havan
Kund – a four-sided pyramid with three-stepped formation that symbolizes the traditional Indian Hindu sacrificial altar and is fundamental to any
elaborate religious ceremony in a Hindu household. Here, it constitutes the
impressionist connect between the art of presentation and the design thinking
of an experienced individual, his values and semantics as a designer.
Constructed out of Sun Board, a complex object like this, 4 ft x 4 ft x 2 ft height is designed to be flat-packed to 4ft x 1 ft x 3 inch to convenience logistics. Incidentally, this also demonstrates Lalit’s capabilities of simplification and the deep insights that drive his practice as a designer.
Constructed out of Sun Board, a complex object like this, 4 ft x 4 ft x 2 ft height is designed to be flat-packed to 4ft x 1 ft x 3 inch to convenience logistics. Incidentally, this also demonstrates Lalit’s capabilities of simplification and the deep insights that drive his practice as a designer.
He chooses a
contemporary colour palette of orange, blue and green, the designer takes care
to veer away from any religious or spiritual connotation. He therefore, works
on the traditional motif in a stylized contemporary format – merely an artistic
expression – a vehicle of convenience.
Exhibiting alongside
this photo-installation, the designer is also showcasing one of his other
designs - a table-top organizer – a utility sculpture called ‘To-Do’.
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