Indian art prints

Indian Art, made for the new Indian wall

69 prints. Five living traditions. One wall at a time.

Indian folk art that lives on a wall, not in a gallery archive. Madhubani patterns from Bihar, Pichwai miniatures from Nathdwara, Mithila fish and lotus motifs, Shrinathji and Kamdhenu narratives. Printed on heavy canvas with the detail intact, framed in Bombay, delivered across India. Made for the buyer who wants devotional craft on the wall without flying to Udaipur for it.

68 57 rare finds Five Indian schools Framed in Bombay
Showing 25–48 of 68 prints
68 prints
Higher together

Explore our curated sets.

Curated sets of three, styled to work together and ready to hang.

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Why RareMango

Everything your wall needs, already handled.

Museum-grade paper
350 GSM · archival matte
Hand-framed Mumbai
3+1 layer framing standard
Easy Damage Replace
24hr window
Ready to hang
5–7 days India-wide
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More about Indian art

How to pick, hang, and live with Indian art

The five traditions inside this collection, what each one does on a wall, and the small Vastu and styling notes that keep people out of trouble. Pick the question your room is asking. The rest will wait.

What's actually in this collection?

Five living Indian traditions, picked because they earn a wall:

  • Madhubani — folk painting from Mithila in Bihar. Borders, fish, peacocks, weddings. Carries colour without going loud.
  • Mughal-inspired — palace gardens, dancing women, courtly scenes. Detail rewards a closer look.
  • Warli — white rice-paste figures on a red mud ground, from the Sahyadri hills three hours north of Bombay. The easiest of the five to live with.
  • Gond — the Pradhan Gond world from central India. Peacocks and animals built out of dots and pattern. Reads as folk-modern.
  • Jharokha art — the arched-window motif from old havelis used as a frame for a scene. Heritage architecture, calmly modernised.

If you're after devotional Indian art (Lakshmi, Ganesha, the Pooja-wall pieces), that lives at God paintings. This page is for the folk and courtly side.