• Home
  • Contact Us!
  • Privacy Policy

Radio Metta

  • Home
  • Business
  • Education
  • Health
  • Home Deco
  • News
  • Real Estate
  • Technology
  • Contact Us!
  • Privacy Policy
Home» Home Deco»Vintage ads: How Mumbai home decor was transformed by a global design revolution in the 1930s

Vintage ads: How Mumbai home decor was transformed by a global design revolution in the 1930s

Saheli 07 Jul 2016 Home Deco Comments Off on Vintage ads: How Mumbai home decor was transformed by a global design revolution in the 1930s 643 Views

Vintage ads: How Mumbai home decor was transformed by a global design revolution in the 1930s

In the 1930s, Mumbai’s skyline was reshaped as a passion for the Art Decostyle cascaded around the world. Symmetrical lines, smooth curves and the trademark motifs of the “style moderne” came to dominate streetscapes. These elements also became visible in another, less-documented area: in the interior decor of the city’s upper middle-class homes.

Throughout the ’30s, even as the Western world and rural India suffered the impact of the Great Depression, Mumbai’s newspapers, exhibitions and showrooms were bursting with advertising for new, “modern” household furnishings. It was no longer enough for housewives to keep their homes sanitary – keeping up with the latest styles in home decor was just as important.

On Tuesday, a talk in the city by American historian Abigail McGowan will showcase this revolution in upwardly-mobile Mumbai homes through a series of vintage advertisements and newspaper features from the 1930s.

“When modern advertising evolved in the 1920s, most ads focused on selling fast-moving consumer goods,” said McGowan, an associate professor of history at the University of Vermont and a specialist on the visual and material culture of late colonial India. “In the ’30s, there was a sudden explosion of furniture ads and a focus on beautification of the home.”

McGowan’s interest in Indian history began in 1991, when she stayed in Pune as an exchange student for six months. She went on to specialise in South Asian studies and wrote her first book on the development of Indian handicrafts in the 1880s.

Her research on home interiors evolved from her interest in the daily, material lives of people. “In their personal narratives, people write so much about what ‘home’ means to them, and I wanted to explore the history of that,” she said. “Historians have already done a lot of work on Bombay housing, town planning and architecture, but I wanted to find out what was happening inside homes – how did people define the contours of the home?”

The home furnishings advertised in magazines and newspapers of the time looked as stylised as the architecture outside. “It spoke to a certain self-confident, cosmopolitan class in the city,” said McGowan.

The target audience for these advertisements were both Europeans living in India and urban Indians aspiring to adopt the latest styles of Europe and Hollywood. “The focus was not just on extravagance but also on being economical – many of the ads emphasised that buying new furniture or the latest appliances was not necessarily expensive,” said McGowan.

An Apollo Furnishing advertisement from 1934.
An Apollo Furnishing advertisement from 1934.
An advertisement for gas stoves in 1934.
An advertisement for gas stoves in 1934.
Fans with ribbon blades were one of the new appliances advertised in 1934.
Fans with ribbon blades were one of the new appliances advertised in 1934.

While architecture and home-buying was seen as the dominion of men, interior decor advertising was specifically targeted at women. The women portrayed in the ads either looked like black-haired Indians in Western attire, or wore distinctively Parsi saris. “Parsis were symbolic of the Westernised Indian,” said McGowan.

Home decor advertisements in the 1930s were specifically targeted at women, who were expected to convince their husbands to buy modern furnishings.
Home decor advertisements in the 1930s were specifically targeted at women, who were expected to convince their husbands to buy modern furnishings.
Women in Parsi saris, symbolic of Westernised Indians, often featured in home decor advertisements.
Women in Parsi saris, symbolic of Westernised Indians, often featured in home decor advertisements.
A 1934 advertisement featuring an illustration of a Parsi woman.

[Source:- Scroll]

1930s a ads: by DECOR design Global home How in Mumbai revolution the transformed Vintage was 2016-07-07
Tags 1930s a ads: by DECOR design Global home How in Mumbai revolution the transformed Vintage was
Facebook Twitter Stumble linkedin Pinterest More

Authors

Posted by : Saheli
Previous Article :

Raising quality of education will be top priority: Prakash Javadekar

Next Article :

U.K. vote raises fears of real estate slide

Related Articles

Pantone Colour of the Year 2022: 6 Home Office Ideas with a Very Peri Touch

Pantone Colour of the Year 2022: 6 Home Office Ideas with a Very Peri Touch

admin 27 Feb 2026
15 Elegant Living Room Hanging Lights

15 Elegant Living Room Hanging Lights

admin 04 Aug 2025

Creating Spaces: Decor for Every Room in Your Home

admin 05 Apr 2025

Latest Post

C-Section vs Normal Delivery: Key Differences Every Expectant Mother Should Know
Health

C-Section vs Normal Delivery: Key Differences Every Expectant Mother Should Know

admin 11 Mar 2026

Turning Education Ambitions into Action: The Delivery Toolkit

admin 11 Mar 2026
Successful L5–S1 Laminectomy and Discectomy for Intervertebral Disc Prolapse in a 38-Year-Old Female
Health

Successful L5–S1 Laminectomy and Discectomy for Intervertebral Disc Prolapse in a 38-Year-Old Female

admin 10 Mar 2026
The Role of AI in EdTech: 7 Major Use Cases Shaping Education in 2026
Technology

The Role of AI in EdTech: 7 Major Use Cases Shaping Education in 2026

admin 07 Mar 2026
How Real Estate Developers Use Dynamics 365 Business Central to Manage Multi-Project Finances
Technology

How Real Estate Developers Use Dynamics 365 Business Central to Manage Multi-Project Finances

admin 06 Mar 2026
How Real Estate Developers Use Dynamics 365 Business Central to Manage Multi-Project Finances
Technology

How Real Estate Developers Use Dynamics 365 Business Central to Manage Multi-Project Finances

admin 05 Mar 2026
Texting for Better Health: How a Simple Message Is Transforming Care Beyond the Clinic
Health

Texting for Better Health: How a Simple Message Is Transforming Care Beyond the Clinic

admin 02 Mar 2026
March 2026
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  
« Feb    
  • Home
  • Contact Us!
  • Privacy Policy
Copyright 2016, All Rights Reserved
Magazine Blog News WordPress Theme