
Trucks in India aren't simply a way to get around. They're a mobile work of art that says much about the person behind the wheel.

The richly painted exteriors are adorned with slogans, decorations, and symbols that reveal a lot about the driver.
"Depending on which region they're from, you'll see Hindi, Muslim, Sikh, and Christian iconography," said photographer Dan Eckstein, who traveled over 10,000kms of the country for his book "Horn Please: The Decorated Trucks of India."
"There's also a lot of decoration that has to do with luck on the road and warning away bad omens. There's a little demon face they put on the front of the truck, or they might tie shoes to the bottom which is meant to keep away the evil eye."
"Depending on which region they're from, you'll see Hindi, Muslim, Sikh, and Christian iconography," said photographer Dan Eckstein, who traveled over 10,000kms of the country for his book "Horn Please: The Decorated Trucks of India."
"There's also a lot of decoration that has to do with luck on the road and warning away bad omens. There's a little demon face they put on the front of the truck, or they might tie shoes to the bottom which is meant to keep away the evil eye."

The luminous, dream-like style of the paintings is all part of India's trademark vibrant style, says says Shantanu Suman, graphic designer and filmmaker behind 2013 documentary "Horn Please," which explores India's spectacular truck art tradition.
"India by nature is very bright -- even the spices, the food they eat, is bright," he added.
"If you see a Bollywood movie, all the songs and dances, everything is so colourful. And that's reflected on the trucks as well."
"India by nature is very bright -- even the spices, the food they eat, is bright," he added.
"If you see a Bollywood movie, all the songs and dances, everything is so colourful. And that's reflected on the trucks as well."

The beautifully intricate interior of a truck cabin.

"I think there is a big pride connection -- this is the truck driver's world, it's where they're spending all their time," said Eckstein, whose intimate and striking portraits of the drivers captured them in their pride-and-joy.

Many of the trucks have the words "Horn Please" emblazoned on the rear, a call for drivers to honk their horns when overtaking the truck.
"On the road in India it's very loose -- people are weaving in and out, you have animal carts, pedestrians, cows wandering out," said Eckstein.
"And the horn is a really stabilizing factor in letting everyone know where everyone else is."
"On the road in India it's very loose -- people are weaving in and out, you have animal carts, pedestrians, cows wandering out," said Eckstein.
"And the horn is a really stabilizing factor in letting everyone know where everyone else is."

Brilliantly painted trucks in Mumbai.

"I went to this truck depot outside of town and there was about 500 trucks where people go and hang out and drink tea," said Eckstein.
"I was really taken by the beautiful, bright, and varied decorations."
"I was really taken by the beautiful, bright, and varied decorations."

Eckstein said the drivers were light-heated and chatty -- until the camera came out.
"They all look very serious in the photographs, but I think that's just how they tend to pose," he said.
"They appear quite serious and they have a lot of pride in their trucks."
"They all look very serious in the photographs, but I think that's just how they tend to pose," he said.
"They appear quite serious and they have a lot of pride in their trucks."

In a nation spanning almost 4 million square kilometers, truck drivers are the ones quite literally keeping the Indian economy moving, delivering goods to rural parts of the country inaccessible by railway.

"The drivers really do live in the truck. There's usually two or three drivers in each truck and there's usually bunk beds," said Eckstein
"In the cabin it's really a home away from home, and they take a lot of pride in it."
"In the cabin it's really a home away from home, and they take a lot of pride in it."

"Each truck is an evolving work of art," added Eckstein.
"There's the initial build and painting of the truck, but as they go along they'll add different stickers or commission different paintings, or they'll make decorations, or add garlands."
"There's the initial build and painting of the truck, but as they go along they'll add different stickers or commission different paintings, or they'll make decorations, or add garlands."

The painted paneling of a truck in Jodhpur.

While drivers take great pride in their trucks, they're not the ones actually doing the painting.
This is the work of skilled truck painters and artists.
This is the work of skilled truck painters and artists.

"Truck painting is now undergoing a transformation. A lot of things that were once handpainted are now being replaced by stickers," said Suman.

"Some of these truck artists who have been carrying forward this profession for geneartions, now don't want their kids to do it because they realise the hardship. They say: 'I want my kids to go to collage and work in an air-conditioned office, rather than be here in the sun painting trucks all day,'" added Suman.

Here, artist Raja Gharu paints the back of a truck.

From their colorful facades, to "Horn Please" slogans, Indian truck art is loud -- and proud.


