Imagine this: a rosewood bed encrusted with silver, with four life-size figures of nude women at each corner. Ingenuous mechanics allow the statues to wave fans and fly whisks in their hands - and get this - actually wink at the inhabitant of the bed! Wait, there's more! The bed is also fitted with a music box that plays a 30-minute interlude from Gounod's Faust, when activated by a button.
Pure fantasy? Well, if you were Nawab Muhammad Bahawal Khan Abbasi V of Bahawalpur, it was a definite reality. This bed was commissioned from the firm of Christofle by the Nawab in the 1880's.
Cecil Beaton photographed the beautiful Rani Sita Devi of Kapurthala in a tangerine velvet headdress by the firm of Reboux and a silver fox coat designed by Mainbocher, the American couturier who designed the wedding dress of the Duchess of Windsor. Sita Devi was reputed to be one of the best-dressed women in the world with an innate sense of style and, of course, loads of designer clothes. To browse through the book is to enter a world of fabled wealth, great eccentricities and flights of fancy that could become concrete reality at command. The children of Gaekwar Pratapsinhrao of Baroda went from Laxmi Vilas Palace to the nearby royal school in a miniature train especially made by Royal Locomotives and given by the ruler to his son Ranjitsinhrao as a present on his fifth birthday. Automobiles were another extravagance of the princes that enriched the auto manufacturers. Luxury cars were given as gifts and in trousseaus, and were purchased in quantity. The fleet of the Maharaja of Mysore had no less than 24 Bentleys and Rolls-Royces. Jaffer mentions the many special commissions that the maharajas ordered to fit their lifestyle. "For instance because he considered it inappropriate for a ruler to appear on the same level as his staff, Osman Ali Khan, Nizam of Hyderabad, commissioned from Barker and Company a car with a special elevated rear seat. Maharana Bhupal Singh of Udaipur overcame this obstacle by simply having his aide-de-camp squat on the car floor." Jaffer, who was in New York recently, spoke to Little India about his extensive research for the book. Asked when the addiction for Western goods occurred for the princes, he says: "I think it's from the very beginning and exotica has always been sought after in any culture. The instant you take something out of the original setting it becomes all the more desirable." He points out that foreign goods were particularly attractive, because these objects were not as accessible as they are today. The emperor Akbar was one of the early collectors, fascinated by western sculpture and paintings as well as Chinese porcelain, which were brought in by Portuguese traders. The fascination for these goods only heightened during the British rule, when the princes had the wealth and the accessibility.
"Not only are these objects extraordinary but they tell so much about the princes and their lives and their own particular stories," says Jaffer. "Their encounters with the west, their marriages, the things they commissioned for their wives and their houses. It's clearly documented as well and so it is possible to put together the entire scenario. It's very, very riveting."
And the legacy of the Made for Maharaja days? Says Jaffer, "I believe the legacy is a belief in fantasy and a belief in extraordinary high quality and the importance of luxury." Were the British dangling these objects even as they took away the power from these princes? Jaffer says they had lost power in any case so it was merely compensation or a distraction for the princes. Made impotent, they could still conquer the western world with their wealth and live as well as the rulers. All these prestige items announced their own self worth, even though in reality they had little power. Is the maharaja phase over or do we now have new maharajas in India - the fabulously wealthy scions of the industrial houses, the tech czars, the Bollywood princes and princesses and the nouveau riche who dress in designer togs and live the million dollar lifestyle? Are the major Western merchants of luxury goods headed right back to India and its new maharajas? "Oh absolutely," says Jaffer, "This has something to do with the exotic and the different perspectives and especially the fact that Indians and British have always loved the ceremonial and the grand. Indians have always been a very external culture in terms of brands of luxury houses, and their immediately identifiable designs really meet the needs of the high level Indian consumers." And so, after a lull of a few years, we see the luxury houses returning to the lucrative Indian market. Although the book is about luxury goods, it is quite broad based, because underlying all the glittering things is the bigger story about the westernization of Indian princes and their adoption of a western way of living and dressing. Says Jaffer: "So for all of us Indians who live outside India and eventually adopt a western way of life, I think there is a personal connection. The princes are experiencing dual lives in their period of living, and the hybridity of their existence is something Indians living outside India - and indeed inside India today - experience as we become Westernized in this time of globalization." Yes, we may not all be able to commission custom-made silver beds with life-size sculptures on every corner from Christofle, but we'll settle for the new Chanel suit or the bracelet from Cartier any time! |
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