Essayer OR - Gratuit
JOURNEYING THROUGH CRAFT, CULTURE AND SOCIAL HISTORY
Elle Decor India
|December 2025 - January 2026
Less is more is not part of the Indian aesthetic. Every element, whether colour, imagery or embellishment, is used to the full. Every surface filled to the maximum. Unlike the Japanese or Swedes, we don't do minimal!
Negative space, an important part of design elsewhere, is not a part of the Indian tradition. When a master carver encounters a grain of rice, he engraves an entire Taj Mahal, or the text of the Hanuman Chalisa! Given a temple wall in Khajuraho or Thanjavur, he fills it with hundreds of figures – a whole social history of its times. The Madurai Meenakshi Temple reportedly has 33,000 images! A Kashmiri papier-mâché screen or Jamewar shawl will blossom into a garden of flowers, each intricately delineated and imagined. At its best this approach is multilayered and magnificent, at its worst it is cluttered and overdone. It worked well in India's vast palaces under the blazing sun, each royal court trying to outdo the other in splendour and show. Like everything, in the 21st century it needs reinvention. Ornately embossed silver furniture that looked magnificent in marble-floored halls with towering ceilings seems inappropriate in a three-bedroom Bandra apartment in Mumbai. Just as the gargantuan 10 course dinners of our ancestors don't work for our 21st century digestions! In India, the term design is often confused with ornamentation. Form, function and finish play second fiddle. The idea of design is used like an aerosol spray in a smelly bathroom. To pretend that obsolete, stale things are fresh! It's no coincidence that when I first started working with interior designer Shona Ray in the early 1970s, people thought an interior designer and an interior decorator were one and the same: the person who applied fresh paint on walls.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition December 2025 - January 2026 de Elle Decor India.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Elle Decor India
Elle Decor India
AND THE WINNER IS...
EDIDA India 2025: The 24th ELLE DECO International Design Awards reflect where design stands today across disciplines, aspiration, scales and contexts
5 mins
February - March 2026
Elle Decor India
The poetry of quiet order
Swadesh interprets storage as a design language, shaping contemporary interiors through handcrafted furniture that balances material intelligence and cultural memory.
1 mins
February - March 2026
Elle Decor India
SNEAK PEEK INTO
Sean Anderson's curatorial practice, inviting dialogues with and around cultures of the world
1 mins
February - March 2026
Elle Decor India
REAL RUGGED, IMPERFECT
Eclipsing Navsari's sleepy alleys, Design ni Dukaan sculpts a lofty modernist home that slopes, slants and sheds perfection in pursuit of a higher purpose
4 mins
February - March 2026
Elle Decor India
BRAND NEWS
Exciting new releases, store launches and the coolest finds in sculpted stone, refined engineering, furniture and lighting, this is our curated selection of what you need to look out for this season.
2 mins
February - March 2026
Elle Decor India
PLAYING IT CURIOUS
reD Architects concoct a whirlwind of curiosities that reveal themselves in cinematic progression inside a residence in Mumbai
2 mins
February - March 2026
Elle Decor India
CURATIO BY THOMAS HAARMANN
At Maison et Objet, this small exhibit space within the large hall stood out gathered new perspectives on collectibles, fostering meaning through a shared exchange
1 min
February - March 2026
Elle Decor India
A MEDITATION ON THRESHOLDS
Chasing light, resting in shade and negotiating a presence within a landscape of gardens, Khosla + Anand creates a house for a couple in the bucolic Hyderabad outskirts, anchoring Tropical Modernism in memory and the life-world of the tropics
4 mins
February - March 2026
Elle Decor India
CHAIRS THAT CHANGED HISTORY
Exclusive: Century-old chairs rebirth from the archives of Mahendra Doshi for a defining new exhibition in Mumbai
2 mins
February - March 2026
Elle Decor India
A MATERIAL LEGACY
The Turning Point, a retrospective at Nilaya Anthology in Mumbai, is an ode to Pinakin Patel's lifelong tryst with essentialism in design
1 mins
February - March 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

