Pakistan's famous truck art takes to the skies
Such art has become one of Pakistan’s best-known cultural exports in recent years. UNESCO, for example, has been using truck art, blended with indigenous themes, to promote girls’ education in a northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
With elaborate and flamboyant motifs, Pakistani truck art that has inspired gallery exhibitions abroad and prompted stores in Western cities to sell miniatures will soon move from its highways to the skies. A flying academy is painting a two-seater Cessna aircraft with the colourful technique.
Cessna 150 training aircraft [AP-BIJ] painted in famous Pakistani truck art livery at Karachi Airport, Pakistan.
— Mohammed Firaas | ????????????????✈ (@raisinganchor) January 1, 2021
Would love to see a #PIA aircraft painted in the same style one day! ????✈
PC: Sky Wings PVT Limited#avgeeks #planespotting #aviation #pakistan #truckart #culture pic.twitter.com/1Ilzhi1r2W
“We want to show the world that Pakistan is not all about Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and terrorism issues; it a very diverse country and a land of opportunities,” Imran Aslam Khan, Chief Operating Officer of Sky Wings, a flight training organisation, told Reuters. He also plans to paint other aircraft, with the aim of promoting tourism in Pakistan.
Such art has become one of Pakistan’s best-known cultural exports in recent years. UNESCO, for example, has been using truck art, blended with indigenous themes, to promote girls’ education in a northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province.
Flying with style.
— TRT World (@trtworld) January 1, 2021
Artists have taken Pakistan's famous truck art from its highways to the skies by painting a two-seater aircraft with the colourful technique pic.twitter.com/WC9NQsxWia
We Pakistanis grew up watching this truck art at Trucks & Buses, and we just love it.
— Jamil Khan (@JamilKh15378681) January 1, 2021
“The world is familiar with our truck art representation; now, with this aircraft, our colours will fly in the air. We are really excited,” Haider Ali, the artist painting the aircraft, told Reuters at the academy’s hangar.
Trained by his father, Ali, 40, has been decorating trucks since his childhood and is now one of the most prominent such painters in Pakistan. Ali hopes to paint an Airbus or Boeing aircraft in the future, saying an opportunity to work on such gargantuan planes would truly be a learning experience.

(PHOTO: REUTERS)

(PHOTO: REUTERS)

(PHOTO: REUTERS)

