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Rare Antique Folk Art Madhubani Paintings from North
India Romantic Valentine Gift for Her Madhubani is a
small village in Bihar, in India, complete with its
small clay and straw huts and narrow lanes. This little
village is the heartland of the internationally
acclaimed school of folk art painting called 'Madhubani'
or 'Mithila' painting. The origin of Madhubani paintings
is traced back to epic periods with the tradition of
painting walls for the purpose of domestic
beautification and ceremonial rituals. Natural and
mythological figures, added with Hindu deities, besides
regional flora and fauna, are painted on houses and
village walls to mark the seasonal festivals of the year
and for special events of the life cycle, especially the
rite of marriage. The paintings in 'khobar' or the
nuptial room at the bride's house are meant to bestow a
blissful life on the newly married couple and hence,
there is an abundance of images related to fertility,
love and conjugality. The other symbols include the
moon, a source of heavenly nectar, the sun to fertilize
and impregnate turtles to bring beneficent powers to the
matrimonial alliance, parrots to symbolize the couple
and fishes for fertility. The human figures are mostly
abstract and linear in form; the animals more
naturalistic. Colors applied have no shading. Normally a
double line is drawn for the outlines, with the gap
between the lines filled by cross or tiny straight
lines. In the linear painting, no colors are applied.
Only the outlines are drawn. Often, a coat of whitewash
is also applied before actually starting the painting.
Traditionally, natural colors obtained from plant
extracts are used.
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