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Shop Bhil Handmade Paintings Online

Showing 46 – 60 of 102
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A Bhil Ritual - Gal Bapsi Product Image

A Bhil Ritual - Gal Bapsi

Titled ‘A Bhil Ritual – Gal Bapsi’, this painting by tribal artist Pinju Tahed captures one of the m...

$ 479.99
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Pithora Horses & the Native Life Product Image

Pithora Horses & the Native Life

In ‘Pithora Horses & the Native Life’, Artist Bhuri Bai brings to life the grace of Pithora horses a...

$ 909.99
$ 909.99
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A Jungle Scene Product Image

A Jungle Scene

Explore the vibrant, colourful scene from the jungles of Bhil depicted through the lens of artist Ba...

$ 1,459.99
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Peacock with the Tree and Birds Product Image

Peacock with the Tree and Birds

Peacock with the Tree shows the beauty of nature and life. It uses the detailed Bhil art style to ca...

$ 779.99
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The Village Environment Product Image

The Village Environment

Bold, bright, and full of life - enter the wonderous world of Indian tribal art brought alive on can...

$ 949.99
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Village of Mahua Tribe Product Image

Village of Mahua Tribe

‘The Village of Mahua Tribe’ by Ram Singh Bhabhor shows the everyday life of people from the Mahua t...

$ 1,079.99
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Farmer At Work Product Image

Farmer At Work

Artist Ram Singh Bhabhor, a tribal artist from Madhya Pradesh, is known for his work in keeping the ...

$ 809.99
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Birds on Mahua Tree Product Image

Birds on Mahua Tree

Bring home a slice of the forest with this exquisite hand-painted artwork by tribal artist Ram Singh...

$ 159.99
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Village Life : The Bullock Cart Journey Product Image

Village Life : The Bullock Cart Journey

Get on baord a journey of Indian art with this artwork of a bullock cart ride painted by artist Kamt...

$ 429.99
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Elephant with Birds Product Image

Elephant with Birds

Your search for a vibrant, simple yet expressive tribal art ends here! Artist Ramesh Katara’s ‘Elep...

$ 169.99
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Perched Birds Product Image

Perched Birds

‘Perched Birds’ by artist Ramesh Katara brings to life a narrative from the wildlife depicted in the...

$ 169.99
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Deer Bebeath Tree of Life Product Image

Deer Bebeath Tree of Life

Deer Beneath the Tree of Life by Ramesh Katara is a stunning Bhil painting. It brings the sacred Tre...

$ 169.99
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Birds on Barasingha Product Image

Birds on Barasingha

Birds on Barasingha by Ramesh Katara is a stunning Bhil painting. It shows the deep trust and friend...

$ 169.99
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Birds Playing with Barasingha Product Image

Birds Playing with Barasingha

Birds Playing with Barasingha by Ramesh Katara highlights trust, strength, and harmony in nature. Th...

$ 169.99
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Barasingha Protecting a Tree in Forest Product Image

Barasingha Protecting a Tree in Forest

Barasingha Protecting a Tree in Forest by Ramesh Katara shows the Barasingha, or swamp deer, as a pr...

$ 169.99

Discover Bhil Art Painting at Rooftop

The Bhil are among India’s largest tribal groups... nearly 17 million people according to the last census. Their villages stretch across Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Gujarat, and Maharashtra. Out of this vast landscape came a painting style that is bold, rhythmic, and alive with pattern.

At Rooftop, Bhil art is not just shown. It is offered directly from the hands of the artists who carry the forest and its stories in every dot.

The Roots of Bhil Art

Bhil painting began as ritual and daily practice, not as art for galleries. Women painted walls, floors, and household objects during festivals, using images of trees, cattle, birds, and village gods. Each form came from life around them, not from palaces or courts.

Over time, these wall and body paintings moved onto canvas and paper. The shift gave them permanence, but the pulse of the village stayed in the work.

Materials and How It’s Made

Bhil painting remains close to the earth in both look and process. Artists grind pigments from soil, flowers, or charcoal, binding them with rice paste or saps. Brushes are improvised from twigs, bamboo, or fibres.

  • Pigments: earth, flowers, turmeric, charcoal, sometimes acrylics today.
  • Tools: twigs, bamboo sticks, rag-tipped brushes.
  • Surfaces: walls earlier, now handmade paper or canvas.
  • Time : from a few days to weeks, depending on scale and dot-work.

Every layer of dots and lines is patient work, a rhythm that feels almost like music on the surface.

Motifs and What They Mean

Bhil paintings carry a grammar of symbols, each telling part of the story:

  • Mahua flowers and trees: sources of food, drink, and ritual life.
  • Cattle, deer, and peacocks: everyday companions, often sacred.
  • Human figures: farmers, dancers, families, worshippers.
  • Dot -filled textures: signatures of Bhil painting, giving depth and movement.

Together, these forms map the bond between people, animals, and land.

Why Bhil Painting Still Matters

Bhil art is more than ornament. It is a record of memory, myth, and survival. Artists like Bhuri Bai, who received the Padma Shri in 2021, carried it from village walls into museums and collections. Today, it is valued both as cultural heritage and as a contemporary expression.

For collectors, Bhil painting offers more than visual beauty. It is authenticity, a voice, and a piece of India’s living tradition.

Rooftop Promise and Provenance

At Rooftop, every Bhil painting comes directly from the artist or their family. Each piece carries provenance details that name and credit the maker. We avoid mass reproductions and ensure fair support for the community.

When you buy a Bhil art painting here, you are not just collecting a design. You are preserving heritage and sustaining the people who created it.

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