NEPAL ARTS
INFORMATION
Mithila Arts
in Nepal (Janakpur)
Bihar boasts of an enviable wealth of rural handicrafts
comprising of hand - painted wall hangings, wooden
stools, miniatures in paper and leaves, stone pottery,
bamboo and leather goods, and applique work. But Bihar's
most famous and fascinating indigenous art forms,
by far, are its Madhubani Paintings. This art is a
strict monopoly of the women of Mithila. Done in primary
colours of natural origin on paper and cloth, they
narrate mythological and religious events. North of
the river Ganges, in the state of Bihar lies a land
called Mithila, shaded by old mango groves and watered
by melt water rivers of Nepal and the Himalayas. The
men of the community have been famous as priests and
scholars. The women largely illiterate find cultural
expression through exquisite paintings created for
ritual occasions. They cover their courtyard walls
in abstract images in brilliant colour, resembling
in form and function the sand paintings of the Navahos.
In the 1960s some local officials realized that if
the women would only put some of their paintings on
paper there might be a worldwide market for their
creations. They proved to be correct and it is a mild
irony in Mithila that the fame of the women has surpassed
that of the men, because Mithila Art, otherwise known
as Madhubani Paintings also, is now recognized throughout
the world. The art of Mithila is linked to religious
ceremonies, particularly marriage and its consequence,
procreation. Interspersed with the Vedic marital rites,
with the Sanskrit chanting by the Brahmins, is a tradition
controlled by the women and devoted to female deities
Durga, Kali and Gauri. The bride and groom are pulled
away by the women for their own ceremonies devoted
to Gauri in which men other than the groom are forbidden.
Gauri is the goddess to whom the bride has prayed
since childhood to bring her a good husband. These
ceremonies are performed in courtyards before painted
images of the goddesses. The function of the paintings
being ritualistic the art is very symbolic. The primordial
energy of the universe is embodied in various female
forms, both living women and Goddesses. Some common
themes include one of the Snake goddess, a form in
which snakes are worshipped at Nag Panchmi during
the monsoons, a time when snakes abound. Durga astride
her tiger is another common representation. Probably
the most powerful symbolism is the one associated
with Duragoman Puren. A single seed that is dropped
in the pond produces many lotus flowers, an appropriate
thought for the bride and the groom at the time of
their wedding. Lakshmi, the Hindu Goddess of wealth,
is a newer and common addition to the repertoire of
Mithila symbolism. Among the male deities Ganesha,
Krishna and Shiva are more commonly depicted. Trees,
birds and animals are extensively used in combination
with other ritual and religious paintings. Sometimes,
rarely, one will see these alone without religious
implication.
Wall Paintings:
The paintings on wall have deeper themes, also narratives,
for they are the stories being told sometimes in a
series of panels. Apart from their decorative purpose,
they also constitute a form of visual education like
picture books, from which ones learns of ones heritage.
Some outstanding ones are done in the Madhubani area.
They have a naiveté and simplicity which perhaps
is their attraction that both soothes and pleases
the eyes.
The multiarmed DURGA
riding the lion flanked by serpents, with their upraised
hoods, is awesome. The subject matter varies according
to the occasion. The Gods and Goddess are normally
there to bless. Their most elaborate picture is in
the nuptial chamber the "Kohbar Ghar" designed
to bless the couple. Here there will be divine couples
like SHIV-PARVATI, RADHA-KRISHNA,
then the signs of fertility and prosperity for good
luck like elephants, fishes, parrot, turtoil, the
Sun, the Moon, bamboo, shrubs in bloom and trees laden
with giant flower. The women with very limited resources
use indigenous colors that they can make themselves
and find bamboo sticks wrapped in cotton for painting.
Painting on the wall