The Triumph of Lutyens's New Delhi

Starts in 3 weeks...
Jun
4
Tue

In the roughly three hundred years during which the British constructed buildings in India there persisted an unresolved dialogue about the creation of an authoritative British style. The Victorians and Edwardians looked with envy at the confident, distinctive and appropriate architectural style of the buildings in India constructed in the time of the Mughal Empire. 

The questions - as to whether the British should impose a British style, fuse a British style with Indian or even adopt the Mughal style for their own – were never satisfactorily answered in India …

That is until Edwin Lutyens penned his designs for New Delhi. Anthony Peer's lecture gives consideration to the several styles of Indian architecture – not least the Mughal, before celebrating the masterpiece, and innovative stylistic triumph, that is New Delhi. 

Availability:
Via Zoom®
Tue 4th Jun 2024
7:30pm BST
120 mins