BP India is pleased to be sponsoring 'Rastrapati
Bhavan in context – the work of Sir Edwin Lutyens'.
One of the key themes of the exhibition is the
interplay of influences in both directions: the deep influence of India
(and her strong aesthetic traditions) on the work of Lutyens, as well
as the influence of British architectural traditions on India's capital
city. This accommodation of different cultural traditions is a theme
which resonates for us as a company: we believe that we will be a stronger
organisation if we can accommodate diversity in our styles of work.
Another underlying theme, is the question of
how to bring environmental consideration into the work of urban planning.
Again, we see resonance with some of the work we are doing, whether
looking at the provision of cleaner fuels for cities, or looking to
promote the use of building integrated photovoltaic solar panels.
As we approach our Centenary in 2009, we in
BP have been doing some thinking about our history. Sir Edwin Lutyens
has played a special role in our past, designing what has been the BP
headquarters for most of the company's existence, Britannic House (1
Finsbury Circus). So for many BP staff over decades, their working space
was literally shaped by Lutyens' designs. This is something we share
with those who live and work in New Delhi. We hope you enjoy the exhibition.

Mahabalipuram Pavilion c. 1750 AD and King George V Memorial 1936-38
Aim
The evolution of Lutyens’s early work and its impact on the design
of Rashtrapati Bhavan is the subject of this exhibition.
Lutyens’s early work in the 1890s was influenced by the Arts and Crafts
theories of the time which sought to emulate, in a creative way, the
architecture and craftsmanship of vernacular buildings.
Later, in the early 1900s, he made a shift from the looseness of planning
and design in his early houses to the discipline – and logic – of classical
architecture. By this time he was regarded as the leading architect
of country houses in England, but he longed for the opportunity to design
a great metropolitan building. Then, in 1906, the commission to design
the Central Square at the Hampstead Garden Suburb in London, followed
by the British School at Rome, led to his appointment in 1912 to the
Delhi Planning Committee.
Rashtrapati Bhavan was the climax of his work and occupied him for
several months each year from 1912 to its completion in 1931. The abstraction
of the design also influenced his later buildings and monuments in England
and France.
At Rashtrapati Bhavan, Lutyens incorporated Indian features and used
local building materials in the same manner as he had drawn upon the
craftsmanship and style of older buildings in England. Similarly his
work in Delhi is brilliantly crafted by Indian workmen using traditional
skills.
Lutyens is a great British architect. His real historical significance
arises from the contribution his work in Delhi has made to India’s enormously
rich and varied cultural heritage. The organizers hope that the exhibition
will contribute to a greater understanding of the importance of New
Delhi as a heritage site of international significance.
FOCUS:
Delhi fountain c. 1920's" and "Trafalgar Square fountain 1939
Lutyens as an architect
By the 1900s Lutyens’s belief in a discipline of order and proportion
was an absolute. At the same time he always tried to incorporate into
the classical style the characteristically Arts and Crafts preoccupation
with the use of local materials. When Lutyens first went to Delhi in
1912, his initial impressions of Indian architecture were critical as
he found it hard to think of adapting the essentially decorative nature
of Indian buildings to his beliefs in constructional logic and proportion.
Later, when he had read widely and travelled in India, he was able to
produce his final design for Rashtrapati Bhavan. From Indian architecture
he selected features which suited his beliefs , many of them from India’s
own ‘classical’ age: columns from the Ajanta caves, the dome from the
Stupa at Sanchi and the wonderful Ashoka railings. It is surely one
of the great buildings of the world.
Lutyens as a planner
New Delhi was much influenced by the planning of other great capital
cities, especially Washington and Paris, as well as by the garden city
movement in England, which Lutyens had been involved with as a consultant
to Raymond Unwin at Hampstead Garden Suburb. He was also an early environmentalist.
He showed foresight in creating the substantial green spaces in New
Delhi, planted with carefully chosen trees. These act as a green lung
for the city and contribute to a climate which is several degrees cooler
than in the older parts of Delhi. Great care should be taken to preserve
this low density.
Lutyens as a craftsman
All Lutyens’s buildings were superbly built and crafted. It was often
said that he managed to get the best out of his builders and craftsmen;
he was happiest on site, handling materials, and his hands were always
rather grubby. The experience of building so many houses in his early
years prepared him for the precise stone cutting needed for the pink
sandstone and cream Dholpur stone at Rashtrapati Bhavan.
In Delhi he took a good deal of trouble in assembling and training
the Indian craftsmen who would work on Rashtrapati Bhavan, and had always
been enthusiastic for making the building of New Delhi the opportunity
for establishing a training centre of building craftsmanship. This vision
never materialized.
STRUCTURE

Hestercombe 1906 and Rastrapati Bhavan garden 1917
The exhibition covers the most important houses of his early period:
Munstead Wood, for the gardener Gertrude Jekyll; Orchards; Le Bois des
Moutiers at Varengeville in France, for a French Anglophile; Deanery
Garden, for Edward Hudson, the proprietor of the magazine Country Life;
Little Thakeham and Marsh Court.
Then three buildings of his early ‘Wrenaissance’ phase: the Country
Life Offices in London; Heathcote in Yorkshire; and Hestercombe Garden,
the forerunner of the garden at Rashtrapati Bhavan.
A single, magical building has a section to itself: Lambay Castle on
an island near Dublin.
Then come the important precursors of Rashtrapati Bhavan: Hampstead
Garden Suburb; his failed competition design for London County Hall
and the British School at Rome.
Then Indian projects: his great unbuilt design for Lucknow University;
the Palace for the Nizam of Hyderabad in Delhi, and Lutyens bungalows.

Memorial to the Missing of the Somme, Thiepval 1927 and All India
War Memorial Arch, New Delhi
War Memorials follow: The Cenotaph in London, and the All India War
Memorial Arch which influenced the form of the great Memorial to the
Missing of the Somme in France.
The final two sections are given over to the gardens at Rashtrapati
Bhavan, to fountains and monuments in Delhi, and finally to Rashtrapati
Bhavan itself, with its drawings and Indian sources.
The photographs and drawings in the exhibition are accompanied by informative
text panels.
VENUE
British Council, 17 Kasturba Ghandi Marg, New Delhi 110 001
DATES
6th October to 5th November 2007
10.00am to 6.00 pm, except Sundays and holidays
INVOLVED ORGANISATIONS
The Lutyens Trust, British Council, INTACH, The Government of India,
the British High Commission in India.

Stupa Sanchi c. 150-100 BC and Rastrapati Bhavan 1912-31
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