All Object Lessons
Everyday Objects

The Pakistani Truck: A Lorry as a Moving Painting

⏱ 45 minutes 🎓 Primary & Secondary 📚 art, history, ethics, citizenship, language
Core question Why does a working truck become a moving painting — and what does this tell us about beauty, work, identity, and the people who decide that an ordinary thing should be magnificent?
A decorated truck on the Gilgit-Skardu road in northern Pakistan. The painted and ornamented surfaces are typical of Pakistani truck art — a working-class folk art that has become a national symbol. Photo: Aapkamajid / Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA 4.0
Introduction

In Pakistan, a working truck is rarely just a working truck. Almost every cargo truck on the road has been decorated, sometimes with extraordinary care, by skilled artists. The body is painted in bright colours — red, yellow, blue, green. The wood panels are carved and inlaid. The bumpers are polished. Mirrors are placed to catch the light. Chains hang down at the back — when the truck moves, the chains swing and jingle, which is why American soldiers in Afghanistan started calling these vehicles 'jingle trucks'. The wooden crown above the cab, called a 'taj' (the word means 'crown'), is the centrepiece. On the cab and the panels are painted images: peacocks, roses, mountains, lakes, the Kaaba in Mecca, calligraphy in Urdu, lions, movie stars, cricketers, political leaders, and sometimes the driver's own face or his children's. Some trucks have lines of Urdu poetry painted on them — Sufi verses, love poems, jokes, social messages. The decoration is not optional. In Pakistan, an undecorated truck looks naked. Truck owners pay thousands of dollars — sometimes two years' wages — to decorate a new truck. They renew the decoration every few years. They show off their trucks to other drivers at the stops. They name their trucks. They call them their wives. They take pride. The tradition started in the 1920s, when Bedford trucks were imported from the United Kingdom to colonial India. The first decorations were simple company logos so that illiterate workers could identify which truck belonged to which owner. The logos grew. Drivers added paintings to remind themselves of home during long journeys. Sufi drivers added images of saints to protect them. Sikh drivers added images of gurus. Muslim drivers added Quranic calligraphy. The art form grew. By the 1950s, Karachi had become the centre. By the 1980s, Pakistani truck art was famous worldwide. This lesson asks why working-class drivers, often poor, often illiterate, decided that their working trucks should be magnificent — and what that decision tells us about who decides what counts as art.

The object
Origin
Pakistan. The tradition developed from the British colonial era in South Asia. The earliest decorated trucks date from the 1920s and 1930s, when Bedford trucks from the United Kingdom were imported to colonial India and Pakistan. Truck art became a distinct Pakistani form after partition in 1947.
Period
From the 1920s to today. The tradition grew through the 20th century, with Karachi becoming the centre of truck art in the 1950s. The art form is fully alive today, with thousands of working painters and continued evolution of styles.
Made of
A working truck (often a Bedford from the UK in older trucks, or a Hino or Nissan in newer ones) covered with: paint (enamel and oil), wood panels (carved and inlaid), polished metal, mirrors, plastic stickers (vinyl 'chamak patti' work), small bells, hanging chains, and sometimes electric lights. All applied by hand.
Size
A typical Pakistani decorated truck is 8 to 12 metres long and 3 to 4 metres tall, with the wooden 'taj' (crown) on top adding another metre or more. The decoration covers every surface — front, back, sides, wheel wells, and even the underside in some cases.
Number of objects
About 280,000 trucks are registered in Pakistan. The majority are decorated to some extent. Karachi alone employs about 50,000 people in truck-decoration workshops. Many tens of thousands of decorated trucks are working on Pakistan's roads at any moment.
Where it is now
Across Pakistan, especially in major cities like Karachi (the main centre), Rawalpindi, Lahore, Peshawar, Quetta, and Swat. Each region has its own truck art style. Decorated trucks also cross into neighbouring Afghanistan and India. Pakistani truck art has influenced fashion, exhibitions, and public art worldwide.
Before you teach this — reflect

Questions for you

  1. Pakistani truck art is a working-class folk tradition. How will you teach it with the seriousness it deserves, not just as colourful entertainment?
  2. The painters are mostly working-class men who earn modest incomes. How will you handle the gap between the value of the art and the pay of the artists?
  3. Pakistani truck art includes religious imagery from Islam, Sufism, and sometimes Sikhism. How will you handle these religious dimensions respectfully?

Common student difficulties — tick any you have noticed

Discovery sequence
1
Imagine being a long-distance truck driver in Pakistan. You drive for three or four days from Karachi up to the Khyber Pass and back, with stops at roadside food places along the way. You sleep in your truck. You eat there. You spend more time with your truck than with your family. The truck is your house, your workplace, your livelihood, and your daily companion. You paint it. You paint the things that remind you of home — the village mosque, the river that runs past your father's land, the apricot trees of your childhood. You paint the things that protect you — Quranic calligraphy, images of Sufi saints, the names of God. You paint the things that bring you luck — peacocks, roses, mountains, lions. You paint the things you love — your wife (sometimes), your children (sometimes), cricketers, movie stars, your favourite singer. The truck becomes a moving record of who you are. Why does the driver decorate his truck?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

For more than one reason. Practical: a more beautiful truck attracts more business (clients trust that a driver who cares about his truck will care about their cargo). Personal: the truck is home for weeks at a time, and home should be beautiful. Spiritual: the religious imagery offers protection on dangerous mountain roads. Communal: drivers compare their trucks at stops, like a kind of moving art exhibition. Cultural: in Pakistani truck-driver culture, an undecorated truck is shameful — a sign that the driver does not respect his work. All of these together. Students should see that the decoration is not just decoration. It is identity, faith, beauty, business, and community at the same time. A working-class object made into a moving statement. The truck is sometimes called 'the wife' by its driver, with all the seriousness and tenderness that word can carry. The decoration is what marries the driver to his vehicle. Strong answers will see that 'why decorate?' has many answers, and that all of them are real.

2
The history of Pakistani truck art begins with British colonial imports. In the 1920s, the British company Bedford Vehicles started exporting trucks to colonial India. These trucks were strong, durable, and well-suited to the rough roads of South Asia. They had simple cabs and load beds — and large surfaces ready to be decorated. In the late 1940s, Pakistan became independent from British colonial rule. Trucks were essential to the new country's economy, moving goods across vast distances on the Grand Trunk Road and other routes. Companies began adding logos to their trucks so that illiterate workers — common at the time — could tell which truck belonged to which company. The logos grew. Drivers added their own decorations. The competition began. In the 1950s, Karachi became the centre of the art form. A master painter named Ustad Elahi Bukhsh hired artisans from Chiniot in Punjab — craftsmen who had previously decorated palaces and mosques in the Mughal style — to work on his trucks. The Mughal decorative tradition, with its detailed floral patterns and calligraphy, joined with the simpler logo-painting tradition. The Pakistani truck art style was born. By the 1960s, the tradition was widespread. By the 1980s and 1990s, it had become known internationally. Italian fashion house Dolce and Gabbana used Pakistani truck art motifs in a 2015 collection. The Smithsonian Folklife Festival hosted a Pakistani truck artist (Haider Ali) in 2002. Karachi airport's baggage carousels were decorated with truck art panels in 2018. Why does a working-class folk art become internationally famous?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

For several reasons. First, the art is genuinely striking — bright, detailed, full of life, unlike most commercial design. Second, it carries real cultural meaning — every motif has a history, every region has its style. Third, it is a story about working-class creativity, which is often missed by official art histories. Fourth, foreign attention often helps preserve traditions that might otherwise be lost — the Karachi airport project, the Smithsonian invitation, the Dolce and Gabbana collection — all increased the prestige of the painters and brought new work. But foreign attention can also be a problem. When fashion houses copy folk art, the original painters often see no payment. When tourists buy 'truck art souvenirs', the money mostly goes to the shops, not to the truck artists. When international institutions feature one famous artist (like Haider Ali), the hundreds of others working anonymously in Karachi workshops can be forgotten. Strong answers will see that international fame is a mixed blessing — it brings prestige but does not always bring justice. The truck artists are still mostly working-class men earning modest incomes for skilled work. The art is famous; the artists often are not.

3
What does a Pakistani truck actually look like? The decoration is not random — it follows specific styles, with specific elements and specific regional variations. The basic elements include: the 'taj' (crown), a wooden structure rising above the cab; the 'jaali' (carved wooden panels) on the sides; the painted front and back panels showing scenes (landscapes, animals, saints, calligraphy); the polished metal bumpers; the 'chamak patti' (shiny sticker) work, where vinyl stickers in bright colours are cut into shapes and applied; the chains hanging from the bumper; the bells; and the prayers and poetry painted in Urdu calligraphy. Regional styles differ. Karachi style is sometimes called 'disco art' for its use of flashing lights, mirrors, and glass. Peshawar trucks (in the Pashtun north-west) often have heavy wood carving. Rawalpindi specialises in 'chamak patti' (sticker work). Balochistan trucks are often very brightly coloured with strong red. Quetta trucks include camel-bone inlay. Punjab and Sindh have their own versions. A skilled observer can identify where a truck was decorated just by looking. A full decoration takes about three to four weeks of work, employing about 20 to 25 different craftsmen — painters, carpenters, metalworkers, sticker-cutters, calligraphers. The cost can be 200,000 to 400,000 Pakistani rupees (roughly 700 to 1,400 US dollars), and for the most elaborate trucks, much more — up to 30,000 dollars for a top truck. The driver pays this himself, often as a years-long investment in his career. Who really makes the truck art?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

A team. The art is collective, not individual. A typical decoration involves multiple specialists working together — the chief painter who designs the overall scheme, the calligrapher who does the Urdu lettering, the wood carver who handles the taj and the side panels, the metalworker who polishes and embosses the bumpers, the sticker artist who handles the 'chamak patti' work, the bell and chain installer who handles the final touches. Each is highly skilled. Each has trained for years. Together they produce one truck. The chief painter is the artist whose name might become famous (Haider Ali, Phool Badshah, Ustad Allah Bakhsh). The others are usually anonymous to the outside world. Their daily wages are 1,500 rupees (about 5 US dollars) for the painter, 300-400 rupees (about 1-2 dollars) for the assistant. The art is valuable; the artists are working class. This is the real situation. Students should see that 'folk art' is often the work of skilled professionals who are paid much less than the value of what they make. The same is true of many craft traditions worldwide. Strong answers will see this clearly.

4
Pakistani truck art is alive. It is not a museum object. It is being made today, by thousands of working painters, in dozens of workshops across the country. The styles continue to develop. New materials (3D plastic, electronic lights) join old ones. New themes (mobile phones, recent political slogans, social messages) appear alongside the traditional flowers and saints. In recent years, truck art has become a vehicle (literally) for social messages. Activists have painted trucks with messages about education for girls, environmental protection, climate change, the release of animals from poor zoos, child safety, and many other causes. The Sahir Foundation has used truck art to put photographs of missing children on trucks, helping families reunite. Truck art for social causes is a growing movement. Truck art has also moved off the trucks. The Phool Patti collective and other groups have applied truck art designs to luggage, kitchenware, clothing, shoes, and even office furniture. The Karachi airport baggage carousels feature truck art panels. Fashion designers in Pakistan and abroad have incorporated truck art motifs. A whole new generation of truck-art-derived products is on sale in Pakistan and online. What is the future of truck art?
Points to consider (for the teacher)

Probably mixed. The traditional art on trucks will continue, as long as Pakistan needs trucks. Some painters are training their sons (and increasingly their daughters) in the tradition. The styles will keep evolving. Newer trucks (mostly Hino and Nissan rather than the older Bedford) require slightly different decoration techniques. The work goes on. But challenges exist. Younger Pakistanis sometimes see truck art as old-fashioned. Plain commercial vehicles (like the Toyota pickup) are sometimes preferred by businesses wanting a 'modern' image. The number of skilled chief painters may be falling. Whether the next generation will produce master artists like Haider Ali is an open question. Beyond the trucks, the spread of truck art motifs into fashion and design is both a help (more income for the tradition) and a risk (commercial dilution of the original art). Strong answers will see that traditions are not static. They are alive, changing, sometimes flourishing, sometimes threatened. The pakistani truck art tradition is currently both. Students should see that 'living tradition' is the right way to think about it. The story is not closed.

What this object teaches

Pakistani truck art is a popular folk art tradition in which working cargo trucks are decorated with elaborate hand-painted designs, wood carving, metal work, vinyl sticker art, mirrors, calligraphy, and ornamental fittings. The tradition began in the 1920s and 1930s, when Bedford trucks from the United Kingdom were imported to colonial India and Pakistan. Company logos painted on trucks for the benefit of illiterate workers grew into elaborate decorations. After Pakistani independence in 1947, the tradition flourished, with Karachi becoming the centre of the art form by the 1950s under master painter Ustad Elahi Bukhsh, who hired Mughal-style craftsmen from Chiniot. Today about 280,000 trucks are registered in Pakistan, the majority of them decorated. About 50,000 people work in truck-decoration workshops in Karachi alone. A full decoration takes three to four weeks and costs the driver thousands of dollars — sometimes two years' wages. Pakistani regional styles differ, with Karachi's 'disco art' (mirrors and lights), Peshawar's heavy wood carving, Rawalpindi's 'chamak patti' (vinyl sticker work), Balochistan's bright red colour, and Quetta's camel-bone inlay all distinct from each other. The trucks carry images of Sufi saints, peacocks, lions, mountains, the Kaaba, cricketers, movie stars, the driver's own family, and Urdu calligraphy including Sufi poetry. American soldiers in the Afghanistan war called these trucks 'jingle trucks' because of the chains that hang from the bumpers and jingle as the trucks move. Pakistani truck art has become internationally famous, with collections in major museums, fashion-house references (Dolce and Gabbana 2015), and applications to non-truck products. The art continues to develop, with new themes (social messages, environmental causes, recent politics) joining the traditional ones. The painters are mostly working-class men earning modest wages — about 5 US dollars per day for the chief painter — making art valued internationally at far higher prices.

QuestionWhat people often thinkWhat is actually true
How old is Pakistani truck art?AncientFrom the 1920s onwards, beginning with British colonial Bedford trucks
Where is it made?All across Pakistan equallyEach region has its own style — Karachi, Rawalpindi, Peshawar, Quetta, Swat, Lahore
How expensive is it?A few hundred dollarsOften thousands; up to two years' wages for a single decoration
How many people work on one truck?One artistAbout 20-25 specialists, each highly skilled — painters, carpenters, metalworkers, sticker artists, calligraphers
Are the painters well paid?Yes, the art is famousNo — the chief painter earns about 5 US dollars per day, his assistant much less
Is it still being made?It is a dying artIt is fully alive, with about 50,000 people employed in Karachi workshops alone
Key words
Truck art (Phool Patti)
The Pakistani tradition of decorating cargo trucks with elaborate hand-painted designs, wood carving, metal work, and other ornamental techniques. 'Phool patti' means 'flower-leaves' in Urdu, referring to the floral patterns that are central to many designs.
Example: A typical Phool Patti truck is covered with painted flowers, calligraphy, mirrors, and a wooden 'taj' above the cab. The decoration costs thousands of dollars and takes weeks to complete.
Taj
The wooden crown that rises above the cab of a decorated Pakistani truck. 'Taj' means 'crown' in Urdu (the same word used for the Taj Mahal). The taj is the centrepiece of truck art, with carved patterns and painted scenes.
Example: A typical taj is about 1 to 1.5 metres tall, made of wood, carved by hand. The shape echoes the silhouettes of Mughal palace architecture. It is the truck's 'face' to the world.
Chamak patti
A specific style of truck decoration using brightly coloured vinyl stickers cut into shapes and applied to the truck body. The term means 'shiny strips' in Urdu. Common in Rawalpindi-style trucks.
Example: Chamak patti work is often combined with painted backgrounds. A truck might have painted floral panels with chamak patti geometric shapes overlaid for extra shine. The whole effect is intentionally dazzling.
Jingle truck
The English name for a Pakistani decorated truck, named for the chains that hang from the bumpers and jingle as the truck moves. The term was coined by American soldiers in the Afghanistan war, who saw many such trucks crossing the border from Pakistan.
Example: The jingling of the chains is not just decorative. Drivers say the sound keeps them awake during long mountain drives, especially at night. The chains and bells are both beautiful and practical.
Ustad
An Urdu word meaning 'master'. Used as a title for senior truck artists, like 'Ustad Elahi Bukhsh' (the Karachi master who established the modern truck art tradition in the 1950s). Other crafts in South Asia use the same title for their senior practitioners.
Example: A truck artist becomes an Ustad after many years of training, usually starting as an apprentice as a child. The transition from apprentice to Ustad can take 20 years or more. Becoming an Ustad means having your own workshop and training your own apprentices.
Sufi
A mystical strand of Islam, with strong traditions in South Asia. Many Pakistani truck drivers consider themselves followers of particular Sufi saints, whose images and shrines appear on truck art. Sufi poetry is often painted on trucks as well.
Example: Common Sufi figures in truck art include Data Ganj Bakhsh (saint of Lahore), Lal Shahbaz Qalandar (saint of Sehwan), and many others. The images on trucks are believed to bring the saint's blessing on the journey.
Use this in other subjects
  • Art: Each student designs a small mock decoration for an imagined truck. They choose: a colour scheme, a central image (an animal, a landscape, a person, a religious symbol), a piece of text or poetry. Display the designs. Discuss: what is the relationship between art and the everyday object the art is on?
  • History: Build a timeline of Pakistani truck art: British colonial trucks arrive (1920s), Pakistani independence (1947), Karachi becomes the centre under Ustad Elahi Bukhsh (1950s), spread across Pakistan (1960s-80s), international recognition (1990s-2000s), social-message truck art (2010s onwards), continued evolution today. The tradition is about 100 years old, but it has changed many times in that century.
  • Geography: On a map of Pakistan, mark the major centres of truck art: Karachi (the main centre, in Sindh province), Rawalpindi (Punjab, near Islamabad), Peshawar (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa), Quetta (Balochistan), Lahore (Punjab), Swat (north-western mountains). Discuss: each region has its own truck art style. Regional traditions exist in many countries — what are the regional differences in your own country's art and craft?
  • Citizenship: Hold a class discussion: 'Truck artists are highly skilled but earn modest wages. Pakistani truck art is internationally famous but the painters are not. What should be done about this?' Strong answers will see that this is a real ongoing question, with many possible answers — copyright protection for folk artists, certification schemes, fair-trade markets for craft products, public investment in folk traditions. None of these is a complete solution.
  • Language: Pakistani truck art often includes Urdu calligraphy — poetry, prayers, social messages, the names of family members. Urdu is one of the major languages of Pakistan and is written in a flowing script related to Arabic. Discuss: writing as art. Calligraphy is a serious art form in many cultures, including Arabic, Chinese, and Western traditions. Pakistani truck calligraphy is one example.
  • Ethics: Pakistani truck art includes religious imagery from Islam and Sufism (and historically from Sikhism too). Discuss: when does the use of religious imagery on a working object honour the religion, and when does it not? Are there boundaries that should not be crossed? Strong answers will see that Pakistani truck culture has its own internal sense of what is appropriate, which is worth respecting.
Common misconceptions
Wrong

Pakistani truck art is ancient.

Right

The tradition began in the 1920s, with the import of British Bedford trucks to colonial India. The decoration style draws on much older Mughal and folk art traditions, but the application to trucks is modern. The tradition is about 100 years old, not thousands.

Why

Calling it 'ancient' makes it sound mythological. The truth is more interesting — a genuine new folk tradition created in living memory.

Wrong

All Pakistani trucks look the same.

Right

Each region of Pakistan has its own truck art style. Karachi uses mirrors and lights ('disco art'). Peshawar uses heavy wood carving. Rawalpindi specialises in vinyl sticker work ('chamak patti'). Balochistan uses bright red dominantly. Quetta includes camel-bone inlay. An expert can identify where a truck was decorated just by looking at it.

Why

'All the same' erases the real regional diversity. Pakistan is a country of many regions and many traditions.

Wrong

Truck art is just decoration.

Right

Truck art is identity, faith, beauty, business, and community at the same time. It carries Sufi saints' images for protection. It includes Urdu poetry for inspiration. It shows the driver's family for love. It attracts business through reputation. It connects drivers to a community of fellow craftsmen and clients. Calling it 'just decoration' misses what it actually does.

Why

'Just decoration' tends to trivialise folk art. The truth is that this art is deeply functional in many ways at once.

Wrong

The painters are paid well because the art is internationally famous.

Right

The chief painter typically earns about 5 US dollars per day. His assistant earns 1 to 2 dollars per day. Many of the most famous truck artworks are made by men who live in modest neighbourhoods on modest incomes. International fame has not generally translated into prosperity for the painters.

Why

This is one of the real injustices of folk art worldwide. Knowing it honestly is part of taking the art seriously.

Teaching this with care

Treat Pakistan as a real country with a real living folk tradition. Pakistan has about 240 million people, several major regions and languages (Urdu, Punjabi, Sindhi, Pashto, Balochi, and others), four provinces plus federally administered areas. The country is mostly Muslim, with significant religious minorities. Treat all of these with respect. Use proper terms — phool patti, taj, chamak patti, Ustad, Sufi. Pronounce 'phool patti' as 'fool PUT-tee'. Pronounce 'taj' as 'tahj' (like the Taj Mahal). Pronounce 'chamak patti' as 'CHA-muck PUT-tee'. Pronounce 'Karachi' as 'kuh-RAH-chee'. Be honest about the working conditions. Truck artists are mostly working-class men earning modest wages. The art is internationally famous; the artists usually are not. The gap is a real ongoing question. Do not romanticise this. Be respectful of religious imagery. Pakistani truck art includes Quranic calligraphy, images of Sufi saints, references to the Kaaba in Mecca, Islamic geometric patterns. These are religious objects, not just decorative motifs. Treat them with appropriate respect. Sikh and Hindu imagery sometimes appears too, especially on older trucks or trucks operated by non-Muslim Pakistanis. Be careful with the 'jingle truck' name. The term was coined by American soldiers in the Afghanistan war and is widely used in international media. It is acceptable. But the local terms — phool patti truck, decorated truck, sometimes 'truck art truck' — are more respectful when speaking with or about Pakistanis. Use both, but prefer the local terms where possible. Be careful about the wider Pakistan-Afghanistan-India political context. Pakistan has had complex relationships with both neighbours, including the partition of 1947 and the Afghanistan wars of the past 50 years. Mention these factually only as background, without going into adult political detail. Avoid the lazy 'colourful exotic Pakistan' framing. The country has many serious problems (poverty, security issues, environmental crises) alongside its rich cultural traditions. Treat the truck art seriously, not as a tourist attraction. If you have Pakistani or South Asian students, give them space to share but do not put them on the spot. Many will have memories of decorated trucks on family trips. Finally, end the lesson on the present. Truck artists are working today. New trucks are being decorated this week. The tradition is alive and changing.

Check what students have understood

Answer each question in one or two sentences. Use what you have learned about Pakistani truck art.

  1. When and how did Pakistani truck art begin?

    It began in the 1920s, when Bedford trucks were imported from the United Kingdom to colonial India. Company logos painted on trucks for the benefit of illiterate workers grew into elaborate decorations. After Pakistani independence in 1947, the tradition flourished, with Karachi becoming the main centre by the 1950s.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that mentions the 1920s origin and the British colonial trucks. Mentioning the 1950s Karachi centre is a bonus.
  2. What does a typical Pakistani decorated truck look like?

    The truck is completely covered in painted decoration — flowers, peacocks, lions, scenes of nature, calligraphy in Urdu, religious imagery. A wooden 'taj' (crown) rises above the cab. The bumpers are polished. Mirrors and stickers catch the light. Chains hang from the back and jingle as the truck moves.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention at least three of these elements. Two or fewer earns partial credit.
  3. Why is the truck called a 'jingle truck' in English?

    Because chains hang from the bumpers and jingle as the truck moves. The term was coined by American soldiers in the Afghanistan war, who saw many such trucks crossing the border from Pakistan. The local Urdu term is 'phool patti truck' (flower-leaves truck).
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that explains the jingling chains and mentions either the American origin of the name or the local Urdu term.
  4. How does the decoration of a single truck happen?

    A team of about 20 to 25 specialists works on one truck for three to four weeks. The team includes a chief painter (who designs the overall scheme), a calligrapher, wood carvers, metalworkers, sticker artists, and others. The cost is typically thousands of dollars — sometimes two years' wages for the driver.
    Marking note: Strong answers will mention the team approach and the time taken. Either alone earns most marks.
  5. How well are the truck artists paid?

    The chief painter typically earns about 5 US dollars per day. His assistant earns 1 to 2 dollars per day. The art is internationally famous, with collections in major museums and references in international fashion (like Dolce and Gabbana). The painters themselves are mostly working-class men on modest incomes.
    Marking note: Award full marks for any answer that recognises the gap between the international fame of the art and the modest income of the painters.
Discuss together

These questions have no single right answer. Talk in pairs or small groups, then share your ideas with the class.

  1. Why might a working-class truck driver spend two years' wages decorating his truck?

    This is a question about what we value. Some students will say: for business reasons (a better-looking truck attracts more clients). Others will say: for personal pride (the truck is the driver's home and should be beautiful). Others will say: for faith (the religious imagery offers protection). Others will say: for community (drivers compare their trucks at stops). Strong answers will see that all of these are real, and that the truck represents many things at once. The deeper point is that beauty is not a luxury for working people. It is a need. The Pakistani truck driver who spends two years' wages on his truck is making a statement that his work, his home, his life deserve to be beautiful. This is the same statement that anyone makes when they spend money on a wedding, a haircut, a celebration, a beautiful meal. Beauty matters. End by asking: is there something you have spent more than you 'should' on, because it mattered to you?
  2. Pakistani truck art is internationally famous, but the painters are mostly working-class and earn modest wages. Is this fair?

    This is a real question about the economics of art and craft. Strong answers will see that 'fair' is a complicated word. The international fame has brought some real benefits — work for famous painters like Haider Ali, employment in Karachi's 50,000 truck-decoration workshops, prestige for the tradition. But it has not made most painters wealthy. Italian fashion houses copy the designs without paying. Tourist shops sell 'truck art souvenirs' without sharing the income with the painters. International institutions feature one famous artist while hundreds of others remain anonymous. This is the situation. What could be done? Various ideas — copyright protections for folk artists, fair-trade certification schemes, public investment in workshops, direct sales to international markets via the painters' own organisations. None is a complete answer. The same questions apply to many folk arts worldwide. End by saying that this is a real ongoing issue that adults are still trying to solve.
  3. Pakistani truck art is recent — only about 100 years old — but feels deeply traditional. Can a tradition be 'new'?

    This is a creative question. Strong answers will see that 'tradition' does not have to mean 'ancient'. Many things we call traditional are actually quite recent. The matryoshka doll is from 1890. The Olympic torch relay is from 1936. The modern fez is from 1826. The modern Brazilian carnival samba schools are from the 1920s. The Pakistani truck art tradition fits this pattern — fully recognisable as a tradition, but only about 100 years old. The deeper point is that traditions are constantly being created. Some of what students see around them is new now and will be traditional in 50 years. End by asking: is there anything in your community that started recently but is already feeling like a tradition?
Teaching sequence
  1. THE HOOK (5 min)
    Without saying anything about the lesson, ask: 'Have you ever seen a truck that was a piece of art?' Take answers. Then say: 'In Pakistan, almost every working truck is. Thousands of trucks on Pakistani roads are hand-painted by skilled artists. They are called jingle trucks. We are going to find out about them.'
  2. INTRODUCE THE OBJECT (10 min)
    Describe a typical Pakistani decorated truck: completely covered in painted decoration, with a wooden crown (taj) above the cab, polished bumpers, mirrors, hanging chains that jingle, Urdu calligraphy, and images of flowers, peacocks, saints, and movie stars. About 280,000 such trucks in Pakistan today. Pause and ask: 'Why would a working truck need so much decoration?' Listen to answers. They will lead into the questions of identity, beauty, and pride.
  3. THE HISTORY (10 min)
    Tell the story: British Bedford trucks imported in the 1920s. Company logos for illiterate workers. Decorations grew. Karachi became the centre in the 1950s under Ustad Elahi Bukhsh, who hired Mughal-style craftsmen. The art form developed through the 20th century. Today fully recognised internationally. Discuss: this is a recent tradition, only about 100 years old, but it feels deeply established.
  4. WHO MAKES IT (15 min)
    On the board, write 'How is one truck decorated?' Then list: 20-25 specialists work on it for 3-4 weeks. Chief painter, calligrapher, wood carver, metalworker, sticker artist. Cost: thousands of dollars, sometimes two years' wages for the driver. Then write 'How much do the painters earn?' The chief painter earns about 5 US dollars per day. Discuss: the gap between the value of the art and the pay of the artists is one of the real injustices of folk art worldwide.
  5. CLOSING (5 min)
    Ask: 'Why might a working-class person decide that his working truck should be magnificent?' Take a few honest answers. End by saying: 'Pakistani truck art is a statement about who decides what counts as beauty. The working-class drivers of Pakistan decided their trucks should be magnificent. The painters of Karachi made them so. The result is one of the most distinctive art traditions in the world, made by working people, for working people, on working trucks. Every Pakistani truck on the road today is a small reminder that beauty is not just for museums. It is for everyone.'
Classroom materials
Design a Truck
Instructions: Each student designs a decoration for an imaginary truck on a sheet of paper. They must include: a colour scheme; one or more central images that mean something to them; one piece of text or poetry; a wooden 'taj' design above the cab. Display the designs. Discuss: each is a small expression of the student's identity, just as each Pakistani truck is a small expression of its driver's identity.
Example: In Mr Hussain's class, students designed trucks with images of their favourite cricketers, scenes from their grandparents' villages, lines of poetry in their family languages, and the names of their younger siblings. The teacher said: 'You have just done what a Pakistani truck driver does. You have decorated a working object with the things you love. The Pakistani driver has more money than you (probably), so he can hire professionals. But the impulse is the same. Beauty for the working life.'
From Workshop to Truck
Instructions: On the board, draw a simple flow chart: 'New truck arrives at workshop' → 'Chief painter designs overall scheme' → '20-25 specialists work for 3-4 weeks' → 'Driver pays thousands of dollars' → 'Truck goes back on the road'. Then write 'Renewed every 5-10 years'. Discuss: this is a real ongoing industry, not a one-time decoration. The art form needs constant maintenance and new work.
Example: In Mrs Khan's class, students were surprised at the scale. The teacher said: 'You have just discovered what a real folk art industry looks like. Karachi alone has 50,000 people working in truck decoration workshops. This is not a small artisan tradition. It is a major employer, a real economic sector, with masters, apprentices, customers, and a competitive market. Folk art at this scale is unusual in the modern world.'
The Painters
Instructions: Tell the students about specific named painters — Ustad Elahi Bukhsh (the founder of modern Pakistani truck art in the 1950s), Ustad Allah Bakhsh (a master of Sufi imagery), Haider Ali (the most internationally famous current painter, who exhibited at the Smithsonian in 2002), Phool Badshah (known for his fine detail). Each is a real person. Most others are anonymous. Discuss: should we know their names?
Example: In Mr Ahmed's class, students were struck by how little is known about most truck painters. The teacher said: 'Pakistani truck art is famous worldwide. But most of the painters who make it are not known by name. They work in workshops, paint masterpiece after masterpiece, and remain anonymous to outsiders. This is true of many folk art traditions. The art is famous; the artists are not. Knowing this honestly is part of taking the art seriously.'
Where to go next
  • Try a lesson on the jeepney for another decorated working vehicle (this time from the Philippines).
  • Try a lesson on the suzani for another South Asian-region textile art with deep folk roots.
  • Try a lesson on the wycinanki for another folk-art tradition with intricate decorative patterns.
  • Connect this lesson to art class with a longer project on folk arts of the world — many countries have decorated transport (Sicilian carts, Mexican lowriders, Japanese decorated buses, and others). The Pakistani truck is one example.
  • Connect this lesson to citizenship class with a longer discussion of how folk arts are valued (or not) by governments and markets. Pakistan has not always supported its truck artists well. Other countries (Japan, France) have stronger systems for protecting folk traditions.
  • Connect this lesson to history class with a longer project on the British colonial period in South Asia and how it shaped daily life in ways that continued long after independence. Pakistani truck art is one specific example of a colonial-era starting point that became a national tradition.
Key takeaways
  • Pakistani truck art is a folk art tradition in which working cargo trucks are decorated with elaborate hand-painted designs, wood carving, metal work, vinyl stickers, mirrors, and calligraphy.
  • The tradition began in the 1920s, when Bedford trucks were imported from the United Kingdom to colonial India. The art form developed through the 20th century and is fully alive today.
  • About 280,000 trucks are registered in Pakistan, the majority of them decorated. About 50,000 people work in truck-decoration workshops in Karachi alone.
  • Each Pakistani region has its own style — Karachi uses mirrors and lights, Peshawar uses heavy wood carving, Rawalpindi specialises in vinyl sticker work, Balochistan uses bright red, Quetta includes camel-bone inlay.
  • A full decoration takes 3-4 weeks of work by about 20-25 specialists, costing thousands of dollars — sometimes two years' wages for the driver. The chief painter typically earns about 5 US dollars per day.
  • The art is internationally famous, with museum collections, fashion-house references, and applications to non-truck products. But the painters themselves are mostly working-class men on modest incomes.
Sources
  • Truck art in South Asia — Wikipedia (2026) [encyclopedia]
  • Decorated Trucks of Pakistan — Durriya Kazi (1998) [academic]
  • Pakistan's Trucks Are Vibrant, Bedazzled Works of Art — Atlas Obscura (2018) [news]
  • Pakistani Art Trucks on a Bridge of Culture — AramcoWorld (2021) [news]
  • The Rise of 'Jingle Trucks' and Truck Art in Pakistan — My Modern Met (2018) [news]