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This painting as a form of wall art was practiced widely throughout the region; the more recent development of painting on paper and canvas mainly originated among the villages around Madhubani, and it is these latter developments that led to the term "Madhubani art" being used alongside "Mithila Painting." [8] The paintings were traditionally ...
Sita Devi (1914–2005) was an Indian artist, specializing in painting in the Madhubani tradition. She is one of the most well-known Madhubani artists from India, and was one of the first to receive national recognition for the art form, receiving a number of awards for her work including the Padma Shri (one of India's highest civilian honors) in 1981, as well as the Bihar Ratna Samman in 1984.
Ganga Devi (1928 – 21 January 1991) [1] was an Indian painter, [2] considered by many as one of the leading exponents of Madhubani painting tradition. [3] She is credited with popularizing the Madhubani painting outside India. [4]
[3] [7] In 2005, her work was curated as part of an exhibition focusing on the use of traditional imagery in Madhubani art by Narendra Narayan Sinha. [8] In 2010, Devi and several other folk artists recorded tribal folklore in their art, which was anthologized by publisher Tara Books in a volume of silk-screen prints, titled Sun and Moon . [ 9 ]
Karpoori Devi (1929–30 July 2019) [1] was an Indian folk artist, known for painting in the Madhubani art tradition and creating textile art in the Sujni tradition. who achieved both critical and commercial success by selling Madhubani art.
Mithila painting was traditionally done on huts' freshly plastered walls. Today it is also done on cloth, handmade paper, and canvas. Mithila painting is also called Madhubani art. [21] It depicts human beings and their association with nature. The sun, moon, and religious plants like tulsi are widely painted. Following the scenes from the ...
Over the past five decades, Madhubani art has grown in prominence and Baua Devi's work has won critical acclaim [6] [7] —she was the only woman artist from India to show at the Magiciens de la Terre in 1989 at the Centre Pompidou. [8] Her work ranges in scale from a small sheet of paper to murals up to 20 feet high. [9]
This painting as a form of wall art was practiced widely throughout the region; the more recent development of painting on paper and canvas originated among the villages around Madhubani, and it is these latter developments that may correctly be referred to as Madhubani art. [21]