For Egyptian kitchen designer Amr Al Helmy, the cooking area is not a drab place where you turn your back to the world... instead, he'd prefer it to be rich in cultural overtones, a room full of warmth; a work area where you can converse with your friends and family even as you turn out various dishes; where you can even watch your favourite television programme...
Picture a box with four backlit folding doors of handmade glass. Open it and see a 120-cm long kitchennete with a microwave, plate rack, cutlery drawers, and other necessities.
The style is Art Deco inspired. The designer? Egyptian-born Amr Al Helmy, who was in Dubai recently at Index 2000, held at the Dubai World Trade Centre, exhibiting what he calls cultural kitchens.
While Art Deco was not on display, exhibits included a Bauhaus kitchen and one with a marine theme, complete with steering wheels, brass portholes, et al. The only missing element in the latter was the tang of sea-spray and a few gulls.
Thwarted ambitions do strange things to people. Some get bitter, resign themselves to failure or blame fate. Helmy, who aspired to become an architect but did not have the necessary qualifications, did neither, but sublimated his desires in his cultural kitchens. The road was long and winding, but he did not give up. "I went in for applied art," says he.
"In between, I tried my hand at sculpting and learnt a lot about form. Even today, when I see something 300 metres away, I can only see the silhouette. Colour is secondary," he adds. The urge to become an architect continued even after he graduated in applied art, so he started playing with forms and architectural themes in what he terms as "an immature manner."
But, immaturity was what led to his evolution as a designer. Today, his client list includes the famed singer Amr Diab of the "Habibi" fame.
"My mother and father were interested in everything to do with home decoration and that is what paved the path to my creative fulfillment. I started by designing a rustic kitchen for my mother. It was a way of expressing my hunger for architecture," says he.
Soon he was inundated witrh requests to design, but he refused the work. He was not yet ready to go all the way. "I did not experiment very much with my mother's kitchen or she would have beaten me up. Yet everything started falling into place," he adds. His first cultural kitchen came a bit later after graduation it was a Nubian kitchen. "At that time, I was suddenly introduced to Nubian culture so I started with a kitchen that related to this culture. In the beginning, I looked at their ornaments, the drawings on the outer walls of their homes, etc, for inspiration. This was the turning point in my life."
So what is the connection between kitchens and architecture? Helmy's focus is on form and silhouette. "The
upper part of the kitchen is like a skyline of a city. The different areas in the kitchen are like houses or buildings put together. Then I play further with this idea and find I can create 3-D effects or linear relations between the work areas, create parallel related areas or circular relationships. At the point of experiencing the Nubian culture in 1981, I asked myself why was I scared to go all the way? Why could I not address the kitchen and its areas as architectural objects? So I started by creating vaults and domes within the kitchen," explains Helmy.
"Initially, I was tied down by the limitations of raw materials and by my own pre-conceived idea of what a kitchen looks like. Then I broke all the rules," says he. The domes functioned as hoods and the units were vaults.
"In the beginning, I had great ideas but did not know much about wood and the practical details. So, I not only tried to learn about wood but also formed a team which could convert my ideas into reality," says he.
Helmy is quick to explain that by cultural, he does not mean a literal interpretation of the culture. "Of course, the Nubians do not have such kitchens. This was my interpretation of their culture. Unless you are original, which is a very rare phenomenon, your design must relate in some way to a culture to make it a soul affair," says he.
| The different levels provide architectural aesthetics © Gulf News | ||
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