The Craft
Madhubani painting or Mithila painting is a style of Indian painting, practiced in the Mithila
region of Bihar state, India, and the adjoining parts of Terai in Nepal
The Mithila region, from which the name Mithila art is derived, is believed to have been the
kingdom of King Janak. The exact location of it lies in present day Janakpur of Nepal.
Its Origin
The exact time when Mithila art originated is not known. According to local mythology, the
origin can be traced to the time of the Ramayana, when King Janak of Nepal ordered his
kingdom to decorate the town for the wedding of his daughter, Sita, to Lord Rama. The ancient
tradition of elaborate wall paintings in Nepal and Bihar played a major role in the emergence
of this new art form. The original inspiration for Madhubani art emerged from women’s craving
for religiousness and an intense desire to be one with God. With the belief that painting
something divine would achieve that desire, women began to paint pictures of gods and
goddesses with an interpretation so divine that captured the hearts of many. The paintings were
originally done on walls coated with mud and cow dung.
Materials, Colors and Motifs
The painting was traditionally done on freshly plastered mud walls and floors of huts, but now
they are also done on cloth, handmade paper and canvas with fingers, twigs, brushes, nib-pens,
and matchsticks, using natural dyes, pigments and rice ground paste. Charcoal and soot is used
for black, rice powder for white, turmeric for yellow, sandalwood for red, indigo for blue, and
so on.
Generally Madhubani painting are identified by the fact that there is no space in the
painting/canvas left uncovered. Typically the paintings will also have a margin or a border, but
this too will be embellished with geometrical patterns, or flowers, or other motifs. The colors
are bright, vibrant and eye catching. There is very little shading in the paintings, though not
entirely absent.
Madhubani paintings mostly depict the men & its association with nature and the scenes &
deity from the ancient epics. Popular motifs were - the sun, the moon, flowers, fish, trees,
animals, birds, geometric patterns and religious plants like basil along with scenes from the
royal court and social events like weddings. Traditionally, painting was one of the skills that
was passed down from generation to generation in the families of the Mithila Region, mainly
by women.