Tag Archives: South India

Country Courtyard House in an Ancestral Indian Village

An ancient Hindu temple is being rebuilt in a rural South Indian village that’s two hours by road from any major city. It was over-run by roots and branches but people cared enough to want to save an old temple. These are some images taken by a photographer for the restoration committee, before work began:

Entrance-to-Old-Abandoned-Hindu-Temple-in-South-India

Old-Abandoned-Temple-in-South-Indian-Village

South-Indian-Hindu-Temple-Before-Restoration

This photo was taken by my husband when he visited the village. He said this felt like our own personal Angkor Wat:

Osur-Temple-2

My husband’s great-grandfather once lived in the village, on Brahmin Street. Back in those days, each caste lived on a separate street. Many people have left the village and headed for Chennai or other cities. Brahmin Street is now the most deserted. Here’s a house on that street:

Abandoned-House-on-Brahmin-Street

Here’s a view on the street:

A-View-Down-Brahmin-Street

Here’s a house that’s at least 100 years old, with the traditional courtyard in the middle:

South-India-Courtyard-House

Old-South-Indian-Country-House-with-Courtyard

Unfortunately they can’t figure out which plot or house was the family’s ancestral home.

Once the temple is complete, it will be promoted. People will visit. There’s already talk about people buying plots on the partly-deserted Brahmin Street and developing them. Oh we know where this can go. More new concrete boxy structures.

We heard the cost to buy a plot of land on Brahmin Street is less than what I spend at Starbucks annually for a latte a day!

So here’s a crazy dream … of building a traditional style courtyard home in the village. Here’s an example of a small columned courtyard in a South Indian home that’s been preserved by DakshinaChitra, featured at Shadows Galore (which also has a wonderful write-up about DakshinaChitra):

Dakshin Chitra Courtyard Home via ShadowsGalore dot com

People would go this country courtyard home to get away from it all. To rest. Meditate. Go to the temple. Read. Eat. Laugh. Restore themselves before heading back to the city. Here is what I see …

Natural materials and colors. Curved arches, wood, stone with some softness to cushion the hard surfaces. Like this room in a Mykonos home, at Houzz:

It would be white and light. Like this room at UXUA Casa Hotel & Spa:

UXUA-Casa-Hotel-and-Spa

I have an obsession with a certain chair. We found a chair just like the one below, in Kochi a few years ago and it is awaiting people to relax in it in our Chennai apartment. So this imaginery country courtyard house would have a chair just like the one in this photo from The Style Files:

Home in Italy Featured at The Style Files

Maybe a dining nook area like this, via recent settlers Flickr:

Dining Nook via recent settlers Flickr

Note the pillow with paisley designs like block prints.

And for the bedroom, how about something like this, via zaINTERIORA:

Mediterranean Bedroom

Oh my goodness, this is making me want this to be a real place now!

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Patterns of the Ancient Cholas in Today’s Chennai Hotels

A few weeks ago I shared a series of posts about the ancient Chola empire in South India:

  • Part 1 – why seek patterns from long-ago civilizations
  • Part 2 – who the Cholas were
  • Part 3 – photos of temple patterns

I’ve also been collecting images of Chola art on a Pinterest Board. Check it out to see the bronze sculptures and carvings left by the Cholas.

Now, let’s take a trip to the Taj Coromandel and ITC Grand Chola hotels in Chennai to see how the architects and designers there were inspired by the Chola art in that region of India …

Patterns similar to those in the Chola temples were used here in the ITC Grand Chola Residents Lounge:

The ceiling of the shopping arcade:

Enormous circular motif in the ITC Grand Chola with lotus and temple carvings:

There are subtle Chola touches in this lounge, and you can also see how the architecture is arranged like the columned galleries in South Indian temples:

The ITC Grand Chola recently opened — check it out if you’re in Chennai. We stayed at the ITC Taj in Agra and it was a wonderful experience. We had an excellent meal in a restaurant there despite it being a voting day and they were unable to serve wine. The good thing about the voting day was, the Taj Mahal was nearly deserted of people for much of our visit there!

So now let’s travel over to a mainstay of Chennai’s travelers, the Taj Coromandel. Similar to the lounge above, this Taj Coromandel restaurant evokes the pillars and galleries of ancient Chola stone temples:

The Cholas were known for their bronze sculptures that you can see today in museums. The Taj Coromandel uses bronze sculpture as a theme, along with a traditional South Indian swing:

A bronze sculpture in a silk-lined niche at the Taj Coromandel:

It reminds me of the South and Southeast Asia gallery at the Chicago Institute of Arts, where I photographed the sculptures against colors of paprika and saffron and turmeric:

There are Chola sculptures there, but I didn’t realize it at the time only a few months ago.

Whenever we visit Chennai next, I will visit the Chola designs at the Taj Coromandel and ITC Grand Chola hotels, for inspiration for our Chennai apartment. Some of my favorite shopping is around the Taj Coromandel too.

Cool and Calm Amid Chennai Chaos

Cool and calm. That’s what I hope to achieve in the India pied-à-terre, because it sits amid a busy and sweltering Southern India city neighborhood. Here are images that capture the cool feeling of escape that I’m aiming for (from a Pinterest Board - India Apartment Decorating Inspiration) …

Via Elle Decor:

A chair from Matter that looks like a chair in my husband’s family photo in Southern India when he was a little boy. But the cost of this one chair probably could have housed, clothed and fed their whole neighborhood back then:

From the New York Observer, Madeline Weinrib’s studio. A good balance of interesting and calm:

From the Shangri-La collection, some lace-like jali pattern:

I like this mix of neutral calm and color, modern and ancient style in the Hospes Hotel Cordoba in Spain:

Plus textured fabrics, like Donghia Angelina created in the tradition of Indian couture embroidery:

This is in Cher’s “Indian Fantasy” Hollywood home, designed by Martyn Lawrence Bullard:

I love the shapes of these side tables shown at Traditional Home:

Another room designed by Martyn Lawrence Bullard for Cher, and featured by Rizzoli shows the feeling I want:

This stool from Husk in Australia has what I like: simple but exotic:

Yet another room by Martyn Lawrence Bullard that’s inspiring me. This is really getting quite ridiculous. I should just call him to do my apartment. Like, ha!

Something shimmering is surely needed, such as these Seesha pillows from John Robshaw:

This image from Vogue Living is featured in nearly all my posts about India apartment decorating inspiration, because it’s such an influential image for the decor of the place:

Lovin’ this table from Serena and Lily:

And designs like this Taj silk fabric from Quadrille:

This, like this! But I haven’t located original source of this image — if anyone knows, please comment:

Now, I just need to get to Chennai and get to work …

(EDITED: Oh my, just found Martyn Lawrence Bullard is on Pinterest. Following!)

India Furniture and Its Shapely Legs

Previously I posted furniture legs from our Chicago home’s living room, many with Thai or Chinese origins. We also have an empty apartment in India to furnish some day, during future trips there. Meanwhile you can see a few items we found already in Cochin. For more inspiration, here are some furniture legs from India …

Found at 1stdibs, these show you the variety and diversity of styles of furniture available in India, from the northern regions to the south:

All pieces are from dealers on 1stdibs:

  1. 19th Century Indian Carved Bed
  2. Anglo-Indian Solid Rosewood Daybed with Turned Legs
  3. Late 19th Century Anglo-Indian Mahogany Daybed with Newly Upholstered Seat
  4. Late 19th Century Anglo-Indian Solid Ebony Four Poster Single Bed
  5. Antique Anglo Indian Elephant Gueridon, Black Laquered
  6. Early 20th Century Anglo-Indian Teak Desk with Bobbin Turned Legs
  7. Glass Top Coffee Table Base from India, 18th Century (made in Bicaneer, the  legs were originally part of a charpoy, or Indian rope top bed, and were adapted into a coffee table base)

In a future post, we’ll look at how pieces like these can be used in rooms with mixed histories, not just in India.