Wildlife · वन्य जीव

A creature on a wall changes how the room is read.

Picked for the wall that wants company.

Wildlife wall art is the register that gives the room a second pair of eyes. A tiger in tribal line work, a deer rendered with her fawn in Gond patterning, a peacock holding a slow gaze. Each piece carries a presence rather than a subject.

The register suits Indian homes that want their art to hold the room rather than decorate it. Wooden shelves with carved corners. Brass figurines that have been moved between three flats. Wildlife art adds a slow witness. The room reads more inhabited for the animal being there.

Hand-framed in Bombay. Ready to hang in 5 to 7 days. Free shipping pan-India.

119 A slow witness Ready to hang
Showing 1–24 of 119 prints
119 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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About this collection

Wildlife wall art India: tiger, elephant, peacock, deer art prints.

Wildlife wall art is framed art with animals as the subject. RareMango's wildlife art prints cover Indian wildlife (peacock, tiger, elephant, deer) and broader animal subjects across folk, contemporary, and illustrated registers. Pieces work for living rooms, study walls, kids' rooms, reading corners. Hand-framed in Bombay, ready to hang.

What is wildlife wall art and what's in this collection?

Wildlife wall art is framed art with animals at its centre. The register cuts across folk-tradition (Madhubani peacocks, Gond mother-fawn, Warli forest scenes, Mughal-court wildlife), contemporary illustration (modern tiger, modern elephant, soft-line botanical-wildlife crossover), and silhouette-and-line work. The collection sits across all of these, with the animal as the consistent organising principle.

Subjects across the catalogue include peacocks, deer and fawn pairs, tigers, elephants, leopards, fox, swan, songbirds, horses, butterflies, and a handful of Indian-coded wildlife pieces (peacock-and-vine Madhubani, Gond deer-and-territory, jharokha-framed wildlife). The register suits homes that want their art to feel inhabited rather than decorative.