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Fish Madhubani Painting

Curated by Prayatna
Rs. 864
Product Details

Bring artisan warmth to your home with the Fish Madhubani Painting, handcrafted in India and supported by PRAYATNA. Its traditional technique and earthy finish lend a timeless, minimal elegance to any setting.

Art TypeMadhubani
Dimension32X22X6
Materials & Care

Minor glaze and color variations are natural and add character.
Handle with care. Wipe with a soft, damp cloth. Avoid harsh chemicals and prolonged direct sun exposure.

Product Disclosure
SKUPR-MDPN-L-07
Style CodePR-MDPN-L
HSN Code70139900
RegionNoida
StateUttar pradesh
Curated byPrayatna

Each piece is handcrafted, so slight variations in colour, texture and dimension are natural and celebrate its handmade origin.

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The matsya motif carries a specific intention: prosperity and continuity. Placement should honour that weight while giving the painting dense linework room to breathe.

Living room, main wall. Bharni paintings with this level of fill reward a straight-on sightline from 1.5 to 2 metres. Hang it at seated eye level, centre roughly 140 to 145 cm from floor. Narrow corridors cramp the pattern.

Dining area or kitchen entrance. In Mithila homes, the matsya appears near thresholds and food-preparation spaces because of its prosperity symbolism. A spot beside a dining table or above a sideboard carries that association forward without forcing it.

Pooja room or entryway. The fish motif kohbar lineage suits devotional company well. Morning light works here.

Lighting. Warm white light at 2700 to 3000K holds the depth of turmeric yellow, lampblack, and palash orange without washing anything out. Cool white strips the warmth away. A diffused wall light set to one side works better than a direct spotlight, which heats the handmade paper unevenly and can cause long-term damage to the natural pigment surface.

Framing and protection. The painting arrives unframed on handmade paper. Frame behind UV-filtering glass or acrylic, mounted on acid-free board. Leave a 2 to 3 mm gap between paper and glass to prevent moisture trapping.

What to avoid. Direct sunlight bleaches natural pigments over months. High-humidity walls warp handmade paper permanently. Choose a shaded wall.
The Prayatna artisans in Bihar's Mithila region paint each fish Madhubani piece by hand on paper prepared in the village. This painting follows the Bharni style: bold outlines, dense pigment fills, no blank surface anywhere. The matsya at its centre is not decorative shorthand. It is the motif Mithila's women have painted on kohbar walls for new brides for generations, a direct invocation of fertility and abundance rooted in the region's river geography between the Kosi and the Ganga.

Stage 1: Paper preparation. Handmade paper receives a thin coat of cow-dung wash and sun-dries until it holds a slightly rough surface that grips natural pigments without bleeding. No factory sizing.

Stage 2: Outline. Using a bamboo nib dipped in lampblack (soot from mustard-oil lamps), the painter draws the central matsya first: two parallel curves for the body, a round eye, fins radiating outward. Smaller fish follow freehand, each outlined individually without a stencil or pencil sketch beneath the surface of the handmade paper.

Stage 3: Fill. A geometric border frames the composition, and between figures the painter builds the dense Bharni fill of cross-hatching, dots, leaf patterns, and wavy lines that ensure nothing stays empty. This density is the signature.

Stage 4: Colour. Five pigments go on one at a time: turmeric yellow, palash-flower orange, indigo blue, lampblack green-black, and rice-paste white, each mixed fresh from raw plant and mineral sources that morning. The painter works outward from the central fish.

Stage 5: Detailing. Fine lines reinforce the eye, the scales, the fin edges. Lampblack sharpens any outline that softened during filling. The finished painting air-dries flat.
What does the fish symbolize in a Madhubani painting?
The fish in Madhubani painting symbolizes fertility, prosperity, and abundance, drawn from Mithila's river geography where fish shaped daily life. It appears in kohbar (bridal chamber) wall paintings to bless new households with continuity and forward motion. The motif is among the most enduring in the tradition.
Is this Madhubani painting handmade or printed?
This handmade Madhubani painting is drawn and filled entirely by hand by the Prayatna collective artisans in Bihar's Mithila region. Each piece uses a bamboo nib and natural pigments on handmade paper. No printing, stencil, or digital reproduction is involved.
What is the Bharni style of Madhubani painting?
Bharni is one of five Madhubani painting styles, recognized by bold black outlines and dense colour fill that covers every surface. The style uses cross-hatching, dots, and pattern fills inside each outlined section. It produces the most visually saturated Madhubani work.
What pigments are used in this painting?
The natural pigments in this Madhubani painting include lampblack from mustard-oil soot, turmeric for yellow, palash flowers for orange, indigo for blue, and rice paste for white. These traditional pigment sources have been used in Mithila painting for generations. Each colour is mixed fresh before application.
Is Madhubani painting GI-tagged?
Madhubani Paintings hold a Geographical Indication (GI) tag registered in 2007, verifiable at ipindia.gov.in/gi. This GI covers the painting tradition originating in the Mithila region of Bihar. It certifies origin and traditional practice, not the base material.
How should I care for a Madhubani painting on handmade paper?
Caring for a Madhubani painting means framing it behind UV-filtering glass with acid-free mounting to shield the natural pigments. Keep it away from direct sunlight and high-humidity areas. Dust the frame with a soft dry cloth; never apply water or cleaning solutions to the paper.
Where should I hang a fish Madhubani painting?
A fish Madhubani painting suits the living room at seated eye level, a dining area, or an entryway. In Mithila tradition, the matsya motif is placed near thresholds for its prosperity symbolism. Avoid direct sunlight and high-humidity walls to protect the handmade paper.
Does this painting come framed?
This Madhubani painting arrives unframed on handmade paper, ready for custom framing. We recommend UV-filtering glass or acrylic with acid-free mounting. Leave a 2 to 3 mm gap between the paper and glass to prevent moisture trapping.
What is the kohbar tradition in Madhubani art?
The kohbar is the bridal chamber in a Mithila household, its walls painted with motifs of fish, lotus, bamboo, and birds to bless the couple with fertility. Many Madhubani painting motifs, including the matsya, trace directly to this kohbar ghar tradition. The custom continues in parts of the Mithila region today.
How can I tell an authentic Madhubani painting from a print?
An authentic Madhubani painting shows slight pigment bleed-through on the reverse side, proving hand application. Genuine pieces have minor irregularities in line thickness and fill density. Printed reproductions display uniform dot patterns under magnification and zero pigment variation.

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