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Peacock Madhubani Painting

Curated by Prayatna
Rs. 1500
Product Details

Bring artisan warmth to your home with the Peacock 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-02
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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WHERE TO DISPLAY
Indirect light. That is the rule for any Madhubani on handmade paper. Direct sunlight fades natural pigments over months, so avoid south-facing windows, spots above radiators, or walls that catch afternoon glare through an uncurtained pane. A living room wall at eye level, beside a bookshelf or above a console table, gives the painting breathing room.

ROOM PAIRING
The peacock's warm palette (reds, blues, yellows against a neutral ground) anchors well against white, off-white, or pale grey walls, and pairs naturally with wood furniture and terracotta accents. Avoid placing it against busy-patterned wallpaper or a dense gallery wall. The Madhubani linework needs visual silence around it.

SCALE AND FRAMING
At roughly A4 to small-folio size, this painting suits a spot where it is the single focal piece on a wall section, not one of several competing frames. Glass protects the paper. A simple wooden frame in walnut or natural pine works better than ornate gilding, which fights the painting's own dense detail.

CARE IN PLACE
Dust the glass with a soft cloth. Keep humidity moderate. If paper edges curl, a framer can mount it on acid-free board.
Angle: A9 (Layered colour-blocking before detailing), anchored to peacock plumage build-up

HOW COLOUR BUILDS A PEACOCK

In a Madhubani peacock, colour is not decoration. It is structure. The painter builds the bird from the inside out, blocking entire fields of pigment before the outline work begins, a process that can take a full day just for the base layers of a single composition.

GROUND AND FIRST LAYER
The handmade paper receives a thin wash. Then the painter blocks the peacock's body in a base tone, often warm ochre or turmeric yellow. Broad strokes. This first field sets the bird's silhouette against the page.

COLOUR FIELDS FOR THE PLUMAGE
The tail feathers are the centrepiece. Each feather fan gets a distinct colour field: indigo for the eye spots, vermilion for the outer vanes, kusum flower orange for the mid-sections.

One colour at a time, across the entire composition, letting each dry before the next to prevent bleeding and keep boundaries sharp. Four to five distinct pigment fields build up before any line work touches the surface.

LAMPBLACK OUTLINE
Once dry, the painter traces every boundary in lampblack using a bamboo nib or a fine brush of cotton wound on a matchstick. This is the graphic signature. The double line, a thin parallel border beside the main outline, is a Bharni hallmark that separates adjacent colour fields cleanly and adds depth to the flat surface.

FILL AND BORDER
No void survives. After outlining, any remaining white space is filled with crosshatch, dots, or repeating geometric patterns. The red border frames the composition the way a threshold frames a doorway in a Mithila house.
What does the peacock symbolize in Madhubani painting?
The peacock in Madhubani painting represents beauty, the monsoon's arrival, and divine presence. It appears in Krishna iconography (the peacock feather in his crown) and in kohbar marriage paintings as part of the conjugal pair, linking it to love and fertility in Mithila tradition.

Source: Tier 2
Is Madhubani painting GI-tagged?
Madhubani Paintings hold a Geographical Indication (GI) registration from 2007, protecting the painting tradition originating in the Mithila region of Bihar (ipindia.gov.in/gi). This GI covers the painting itself, not the base fabric when the art migrates to textiles.

Source: Tier 2
What is Bharni style in Madhubani?
Bharni is a Madhubani painting style defined by bold colour fills that leave no blank space on the surface. The painter blocks fields of pigment first, then outlines every boundary in lampblack, often with a characteristic double line. It contrasts with Kachni style, which uses fine linework and crosshatching rather than solid colour fills.

Source: Tier 2
What pigments are used in Madhubani paintings?
Traditional Madhubani paintings use pigments sourced from the kitchen and forest: turmeric for yellow, lampblack for black outlines, rice paste for white, vermilion for red, indigo for blue, kusum flower for orange, bilva leaf for green, and palash flower for saffron-orange. These are fixed to the paper with a binding agent, typically gum arabic or neem sap.

Source: Tier 2
How should I care for a Madhubani painting on handmade paper?
Display a Madhubani painting away from direct sunlight and high humidity to prevent pigment fading and paper warping. Wipe the glass frame with a soft, dry cloth. If the painting is unframed, get it mounted on acid-free board by a professional framer to protect the handmade paper surface.

Source: Tier 3 (model-derived, recommend human review)
Where should I hang a Madhubani painting?
A Madhubani painting works best on a wall with indirect natural light, at eye level, where it can be the focal piece. Living rooms, entryways, and study areas suit its detailed linework. Avoid bathrooms, kitchens, or any spot with regular steam or moisture exposure.

Source: Tier 3 (model-derived)
How do I identify an authentic Madhubani painting?
An authentic Madhubani painting is done on handmade paper (or cloth), shows visible brushwork with slight irregularities, and uses natural pigments that have a matte, earthy finish rather than a synthetic sheen. Look for dense linework with no blank space, the signature double-line outline in Bharni pieces, and a verified cluster or artist attribution.

Source: Tier 2
Is this peacock painting framed?
This peacock Madhubani painting is typically sold unframed on handmade paper. Framing behind glass is recommended to protect the natural pigments and paper surface from dust and humidity. A simple wooden frame in walnut or natural pine complements the painting without competing with its detail.

Source: Tier 3 (model-derived)
What size is this Madhubani painting?
This Madhubani painting is in the starter-grade size range typical of the Prayatna cluster's work. Confirm exact dimensions on the product page. Paintings at this tier are usually A4 to small-folio size, suitable as a single focal piece on a wall section rather than part of a gallery grouping.

Source: Tier 3 (model-derived, verify dimensions with partner)
Can I gift a Madhubani painting for a housewarming?
A Madhubani painting is a meaningful housewarming gift because the tradition began as wall art inside Mithila homes, painted to bless a new household. The peacock motif, with its associations of beauty and prosperity, fits griha pravesh and Diwali gifting. Pair it with a note about the Mithila origin and the GI tag for the story to travel with the piece.

Source: Tier 2

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