WARLI PAINTINGS

8.5 inch height X 12 inch width
$65
FREE Delivery
22 inch Height X 40 inch Width
$375
FREE Delivery
22 inch Height X 40 inch Width
$375
FREE Delivery
24 inch Height X 36 inch Width
$250
FREE Delivery
13 inch Height X 13 inch Width
$65
FREE Delivery
13 inch Height X 13 inch Width
$65
FREE Delivery
13 inch Height X 13 inch Width
$65
FREE Delivery
13 inch Height X 13 inch Width
$65
FREE Delivery
13 inch Height X 13 inch Width
$65
FREE Delivery
13 inch Height X 13 inch Width
$65
FREE Delivery
13 inch Height X 13 inch Width
$65
FREE Delivery
13 inch Height X 13 inch Width
$65
FREE Delivery
13 inch Height X 13 inch Width
$65
FREE Delivery
24 inch Height X 36 inch Width
$250
FREE Delivery
24 inch Height X 36 inch Width
$250
FREE Delivery
Colorful Tribal Warli Painting
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24 inch Height X 36 inch Width
$550
FREE Delivery
Simple Splendours Of The Tribal Life
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70 inch x 30 inch
$415
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Various Aspects of Daily Life in Warli Village
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41 inch x 23 inch
$275
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The Exceptional Form Of Warli Paintings

The numerous tribes of India constitute the custodians of its many folk arts. Having dwelt in the obscurest recesses of the subcontinent, surviving the ravages of changing times and landscapes, each tribe has a way of life and produce a form of art that are unique. Warli is one such folk art form characterised by a charming eccentricity and spatial experimentation. The women of tribes from Maharashtra are responsible for producing and developing warli paintings, namely the Warli and Malkhar Koli tribes who reside in the northern outskirts of the capital and the western coast jutting out into the Arabian Sea. Warli paintings are like visual poetry, done in homemade white pigments against the rudimentary mud walls of their traditional dwellings. The style is rythmic, flowing, and superbly executed after the style of ancient cave paintings.


And it is not just the one-of-a-kind, supra-simplistic lines and curves that set Warli paintings apart from the rest of India's folk arts. When one hears of Madhubanis and Pattachitras and Tanjores, devotional images such as popular deities and mythological characters come to mind. However, Warli paintings depict the social life of humans and as such have an earthier, more widely relatable appeal. Their unique wedding rituals, the endemic trees and animals that nourish them, and typical tribal activities such as fishing, cooking, and ploughing fields are some of the numberless themes that such a vivid subject would lend to art. The paintings that have been curated here conform to the age-old tradition of this art, and are made on cotton fabric. Pick one for your home and/or office today.


FAQs


Q1. What is special about Warli paintings?


Warli paintings stand out from the vast corpus of Indian folk art forms because of their unique technique that involves only one color- white, which is used popularly on the mud walls of houses to create simple scenes inspired by the everyday life of the people.


Q2. Which type of paint is used for Warli painting?


Warli paintings use only one color- white, which is obtained by grounding rice and mixing it with water and gum to get a thick paste. This white paste is transferred to the canvas which is a mud wall with the help of a stick.


Q3. Which state is famous for Warli?


The state of Maharashtra is famous as the home of the Warli people, an indigenous tribe who are related to the Bhils. The Warli tribal population is found in Maharashtra and certain regions of Gujarat, and the union territories of Dadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and Diu.


Q4. Who made Warli art famous?


The simplistic magic of Warli painting was first made known to the world in the 1970s, when a Warli artist, Jivya Soma Mashe was observed by enthusiasts and art experts. His first exhibition in 1975, at the Jehangir Art Gallery in Mumbai, heralded the age of Warli art, and soon this folk art form became famous internationally for its modest aesthetics.