‘People would say, “This is hideous!’”: how
‘tacky’ Portuguese style took over the UK
Pastéis de nata, a Bordallo Pinheiro cabbage bowl and
Portuguese tinned sardines.
Colourful and gaudy, traditional Portuguese designs,
most famously the cabbage plate, were long dismissed as old fashioned. But this
special brand of maximalism is undergoing a revival and has paved the way for a
wider appreciation of all things from Portugal
Larry Ryan
Tue 19 Jul
2022 11.17 BST
In a north
Lisbon neighbourhood, between Sporting’s football stadium and the campus sprawl
of Universidade de Lisboa, is a garden. From the outside it seems discreet, but
once you are inside, it is wild. A fountain is filled with lurid green frogs,
snakes climb the walls, a giant wasp and alligator perch on hedges, crabs
stretch out and a swan sticks its beak into the mouth of a dog.
This is
Jardim Bordallo Pinheiro and the animals are the work of Raphael Bordallo
Pinheiro, artist, ceramicist and titan of 19th-century Portuguese culture. He
launched his factory, Fábrica de Faianças das Caldas, in 1884, creating
decorative and utilitarian tableware and wider ceramic pieces, colourful and
gaudy, approaching folk art, using glazed earthenware that was cheap to mass
produce.
At the
garden, which opened in 2010, you get the essence of Portuguese maximalism. The
fake fauna and flora by Pinheiro are extravagant, kitsch and beautiful, but
almost overwhelming. Their exaggerated detail is humorous, if unsettling –
Pinheiro was also a caricaturist. The pieces are nestled among the verdant
greens of living shrubs and a pride of real-life peacocks, adding to a sensory
overload.
The style
of Bordallo Pinheiro has enjoyed a revival in the past two decades. Its
traditional homeware, with patterned plates and crockery in the shape of fruit
and vegetables, has always had a dusty place in Portuguese homes. But recently
its cabbage plates and bowls have been popping up in the UK, in craft stores,
boutiques, large chains and department stores.
Among the
muted greige of understated Scandinavian design at lifestyle brand Arket, the
cabbage crockery offers a playful alternative, beside the wild flower bowls of
the closely related brand San Raphael. It’s quite the turnaround for a design
that was once seen as dowdy and tacky and it reflects a wider appetite in the
UK for Portuguese design, lifestyle products, food and wine. You can’t move for
coffee shops selling pastéis de nata of varying quality, while vinho verde is
everywhere. There are, of course, plenty of older Portuguese delis, cafes and
pastelarias around the UK, particularly in south London. In west London, the
Lisboa Patisserie and Café O’Porto eye each other from opposite sides of
Golborne Road.
But Olga
Cruchino and Dina Martins – who were childhood friends in Portugal and are now
a couple – are part of a new wave of Portuguese immigrants bringing food and
ceramics to the UK. They have been running their shop and cafe, A Portuguese
Love Affair, on and around Columbia Road in east London since 2013 and wanted
to do something slightly different. They focused on Portuguese products, taking
in design pieces, but also perfumery, soaps, tinned fish and wine. Today,
homeware brands such as Costa Nova, Casa Cubista and Vista Alegre are gaining
broader international attention but the Pinheiro ceramics laid the groundwork.
“At the
beginning, I heard comments such as: ‘This is hideous,’” Cruchino says. “People
would come to me rudely and say: ‘Why do you have this? This is horrible.’” But
gradually, tastes changed. Once Monocle magazine showed an interest, other
magazines began borrowing pieces from the shop for shoots. “All of a sudden we
felt a real increase in the acceptance and the love for Portuguese design. It
was from nil to a lot.”
Cruchino and
Martins were inspired, in part, by the journalist turned entrepreneur Catarina
Portas. If you have ever picked up a Pinheiro cabbage plate, Ach Brito and
Claus Porto toiletries, Emílio Braga notebooks, Couto toothpaste or even the
designs of new Portuguese makers, it’s likely that she is responsible.
By the end
of the 90s, the Pinheiro designs had all but disappeared. Then, in the early
2000s, Portas was researching a book about life during the António de Oliveira
Salazar dictatorship, which led her to look at everyday products and their
manufacturers. During the dictatorship, which lasted until 1974, the country
remained relatively isolated, and so household items were produced locally. But
once the country opened itself to the outside world, people turned to
international products. The tableware, textiles and cosmetics of local
companies seemed a vestige of an older, darker time.
“I just
picked something that was there,” says Portas. “Because everything was ready,
it was by chance it was me. It attracted all kinds of people. The younger
people that didn’t know these products and also older people. People from the
left, people from the right. It was so funny. It was like a shop full of Proust
madeleines [with memories unlocked by the products]. I wanted to put a camera
for people to tell their stories but I didn’t have time.”
She also
never got time to write her book, but she adds: “I used to say that I started
my business in the library and not in the bank.”
Portas’s
ability seemed to be not simply in relying on nostalgia, but spotting the value
in overlooked things. “It was never about nostalgia. It is about identity,
which is completely different. Because identity looks to the future. And I
think the past is full of interesting solutions for the future.”
The Jardim
Bordallo Pinheiro was another Portas initiative, in collaboration with the
artist Joana Vasconcelos. And in 2009, Portas and a friend fixated on the old
kiosks dotted around Lisbon; some were operating as tobacconists but most lay
in disrepair. They persuaded city officials to let them run a cluster, reviving
them as cafe-bars specialising in traditional Portuguese soft drinks and
juices. After a few years they stepped away, but the point was proved and, with
the city’s help, a growing network of kiosks or quiosques has sprouted up.
By the end
of the 2010s, A Vida Portuguesa had five shops; the pandemic forced them to
permanently close one Lisbon space and the Porto branch. However, in late 2021,
another initiative was launched with the Depozito shop, also in Lisbon. Run in
conjunction with the Portugal Manual network of artisans, the shop is split
between traditional craft products and new designers.
Portas has
fielded many requests to extend the brand across the country and
internationally. In the past, she has helped Labour and Wait (a store in
London) to bring products to the UK, while A Portuguese Love Affair was born
partly in her image. But she has resisted further expansion, happier for others
to grab the baton.
Cruchino
and Martins also cite London-based chefs Nuno Mendes and Leandro Carreira as inspirations
in pushing a modern Portuguese sensibility. In March, Mendes opened Lisboeta on
Charlotte Street in central London. The restaurant is an extension of his 2017
book of recipes and reminiscences, also called Lisboeta (meaning someone from
Lisbon). It’s a love letter to his home city and a culmination of his London
years, which has included the restaurants Viajante and the Chiltern Firehouse,
his own Taberna do Mercado and the experimental Mãos.
In his
youth, Mendes tried to distance himself from Portugal. In the early 90s he was
involved in Lisbon’s punk scene, where he says he lost friends to drugs and
suicide. The economy was in a bad way and there were few opportunities.
“Looking at
Lisbon as a city of light, you really could see how much dimmer it was,” he
says. “There were all these beautiful buildings derelict and abandoned, and a
lot of young people were gone.
“I was part
of the problem because I also left,” he adds. In 1992, at 19, he started
studying and travelling and saw the connection to Portuguese cuisine in former
colonies and in places with historic trading links. While cooking in a
restaurant in California, a conversation with the head chef led to an epiphany
of sorts. The chef assumed Mendes was Spanish and could barely recognise any
distinction between the two countries. Spanish cuisine was in vogue, while
Portuguese tourism focused on what they assumed visitors wanted – Italian,
Spanish or Indian food.
In 2005, he
settled in London. “I battled for many years with the idea of going back to
Portugal,” he says, “but at some point I almost felt like my work is more
valuable outside.” At Lisboeta, Mendes offers a slightly more relaxed vision of
his often adventurous take on Portuguese cooking.
The design
was carried out by Mendes’s friend, the architect João Guedes Ramos, who has a
practice, Pencilmen, in London and Lisbon. Their aim was to gently draw
inspiration from Lisbon. On the ground floor, the limestone counter and dark
wood cabinets recall old pharmacies; the multipatterned floor nods to
industrial tiling and street paving; the green of the central stairs is one of
Lisbon’s official colours. A wall in the upstairs dining room is filled with
art from the Feira da Ladra flea market. Out front, on a small terrace, are
some Gonçalo chairs, a classic of mid 20th-century Portuguese industrial
design. “I’m trying to showcase Portugal,” says Mendes. “To speak about the
culture, speak about the food. I’m trying to learn and whatever I find I share.”
Portas is
surprised by how far and wide what was initially a small research project has
gone. She tells a story of seeing an episode of a Brazilian show on Portuguese
TV some years ago that landed on a familiar plot point. “At the end [of the
episode] there was a couple of young people, and they say to each other: ‘We
are going to England.’ ‘What should we do?’ ‘Oh, I know. We can open a shop of
Portuguese products.’”
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