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Peacock Mandala Madhubani Painting

Curated by Prayatna
Rs. 1319
Product Details

Bring artisan warmth to your home with the Peacock Mandala 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-S-03
Style CodePR-MDPN-S
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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This peacock mandala painting is built to be read up close, so it rewards a spot where people can pause near it. Think of an entryway, a living-room feature wall, or a study. Place it at eye level.

Pair it with calm surroundings. A plain wall in a warm neutral, off-white, or soft ochre lets the dense pattern and the peacock's colours carry the eye. Busy wallpaper behind it tends to compete and tire the eye.

Light it kindly. Soft, indirect light or a warm picture lamp brings out the fine double-line work, while harsh direct sun does the opposite. Strong sunlight slowly fades natural pigment, so keep the piece off sun-facing walls.

Scale matters with a single mandala. One framed piece works best as a focused accent rather than a large statement, with clear breathing space around the frame. Grouped with two smaller Mithila works, it can anchor a compact gallery wall.

Protect the paper. Frame it under glass, hang it on a dry interior wall, and keep it away from humid spots like bathrooms or kitchens. Dust the frame, not the surface.
The strength of this piece is in its lines before its colour. In the Madhubani manner, the peacock and every ring of the mandala are drawn first as fine double outlines, two parallel lines tracing each form. Nothing is shaded freehand. The structure is set in line.

Then the filling begins. The narrow channel between each pair of outlines, and every shape they enclose, is packed with pattern, using cross-hatching, rows of dots, tiny leaves, and repeated geometric marks. This is the Mithila refusal of empty space, where the surface stays dense from edge to edge.

The peacock's plumage is built this way, feather by feather. Each feather becomes a small filled unit of curves and dots rather than a realistic shape, so the bird reads as pattern as much as creature. The mandala rings around it are filled band by band in the same rhythm.

Colour comes after the line. Areas are blocked in, and in the older Bharni manner the fills are solid and bright, while Kachni keeps more of the bare line and hatching visible. The choice between them sets how saturated the painting feels.

Tradition uses pigments prepared from plants and minerals, applied with twigs, nib-pens, and fine brushes by painters of the Mithila region in Bihar. The work is slow and exacting, since a single dense mandala holds thousands of small marks. For this piece's exact pigments and surface, please see the product specifications.
What does the peacock symbolise in a Madhubani painting?
In a Madhubani painting, the peacock stands for beauty, grace, and romantic love, and it is often tied to the monsoon and to good fortune. A pair of peacocks is read as a wish for lasting love. This makes a peacock piece a popular choice for weddings and new homes.

Source: Tier 2
What is a mandala in Madhubani art?
A mandala in Madhubani art is a circular, radiating composition built from concentric rings of pattern around a central motif. Here the peacock sits at that centre, with its feathers and the surrounding bands abstracted into repeated geometric forms. The circular order is meant to suggest balance and wholeness.

Source: Tier 2
How can I tell if a Madhubani painting is authentic and hand-painted?
An authentic Madhubani painting shows hand-drawn double outlines, slightly uneven lines, and dense filling that leaves almost no empty space. Tiny artist marks and small irregularities are signs of handwork rather than a flat machine print. Provenance or an artist credit from the Mithila region adds further assurance.

Source: Tier 2
Is Madhubani painting GI tagged?
Madhubani painting holds a Geographical Indication registered in 2007, which protects the painting tradition of the Mithila region (see ipindia.gov.in/gi). The tag applies to genuine Mithila-region work, so confirm the provenance of a specific piece before treating it as certified. This artwork is sold as hand-painted Madhubani in that tradition.

Source: Tier 2
Where should I hang a Madhubani painting?
Hang a Madhubani painting where it can be seen up close, since the detail rewards a short viewing distance, such as an entryway, living room, or study wall. Keep it on an interior wall away from direct sunlight and damp. A simple frame and a plain wall let the dense pattern stand out.

Source: Tier 2
How do I protect a Madhubani painting on paper from fading?
Protect a Madhubani painting on paper by framing it under glass and keeping it out of direct sun, which fades pigment over time. Avoid humid spots like bathrooms or unventilated walls, since paper absorbs moisture. Dust the frame gently rather than wiping the surface.

Source: Tier 2
What size is this painting and will it suit my wall?
The exact dimensions of this painting are listed in the product specifications, so check them against your wall before framing. As a guide, a single mandala piece works well as a focused accent rather than a large statement wall. Leave clear space around it so the detail does not feel crowded.

Source: Tier 3
What materials and colours are used in Madhubani paintings?
Madhubani paintings are traditionally made on handmade paper or cloth with pigments prepared from plants and minerals, such as lampblack and turmeric. Some present-day artists use prepared watercolours or acrylics while keeping the same look, so check the specifications for this piece's exact materials. The tools include twigs, nib-pens, and fine brushes.

Source: Tier 2
Does a peacock Madhubani painting make a good gift?
A peacock Madhubani painting makes a thoughtful gift because the bird carries wishes for love, beauty, and prosperity. It suits weddings, housewarmings, and anniversaries, and the story behind the motif is easy to share. A framed piece arrives ready to hang.

Source: Tier 2
Will this painting arrive framed?
Whether this painting ships framed or unframed is set out on the product page, so check before ordering. Madhubani works on paper are usually framed under glass for protection. If it arrives unframed, a local framer can mount it with an acid-free backing.

Source: Tier 3
What is the difference between Bharni and Kachni styles in Madhubani?
Bharni is the Madhubani style that fills shapes with solid, bright colour, while Kachni relies on fine line and cross-hatching with little or no fill. Many peacock pieces blend the two, using line for structure and colour for the plumage. The balance chosen shapes how dense and colourful the painting looks.

Source: Tier 2
Why are Madhubani paintings mostly made by women?
Madhubani paintings have long been made by women of the Mithila region, who passed the craft from mother to daughter as part of household and ritual life. In recent decades this skill has become a source of income and wider recognition for them. Buying a genuine piece supports that livelihood.

Source: Tier 2

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