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PAKISTAN'S DECORATED VEHICLES
This
extraordinary tradition has it's routes in the days of the Raj when craftsmen
made glorious horse draw carriages for the gentry. In the 1920's the Kohistan
bus company asked the local Michaelangelo, Ustad Elahi Buksh, a master craftsmen
to decorate their buses to attract passengers. Buksh employed a community of artists
from the Punjab town of Chiniot, who's ancestors had worked on many great palaces
and temples dating back to the Mogal Empire.
It was not long before truck
owners followed suite with their own designs. Through the years the materials
used have developed from wood and paint to metal, tinsel, plastic and reflective
tape. Within the last few years trucks and buses have been further embellished
with full lighting systems.
A
new undecorated bus costs around £3000 afterwhich owners can expect to pay
a further £5000 for a complete decoration which can take up to three months.
The cost of decorating a truck is around £3000 on top of the £1500
paid for a new vehicle. Artists are paid between £1.50 and £3 per
day.
Peter Grant first saw these vehicles in 1995 when travelling from India to England by motorcycle. "I was awe struck by their beauty and individuality, I knew then I had to return to document them for an exhibition." After developing his photography work in London for ten years Peter was in a position to fulfill his creative dream.
