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Pattachitra is one of India’s most refined and ancient folk painting traditions, originating in the temple culture of Puri, Odisha. The word comes from Patta (cloth) and Chitra (painting), referring to the traditional scroll paintings created by the hereditary Chitrakar artists for centuries. For the painted surface, the chitrakar community of painters utilises a gauze, like fine cotton cloth, coated with a cooked solution of powdered tamarind seed, chalk, and gum, and subsequently smoothened.
The paintings are executed primarily in profile with highly elongated eyes within a floral border. There are few landscapes, and the scenes are depicted in a foreground closely juxtaposed together. Highly stylized paintings of the Puri Jagannath temple and scenes from the epics, Ramayana and Mahabharata, figure along with the predominant painting of Lord Jagannath, a form of Krishna, with his older brother Balarama and sister Subhadra.
Recognizable by bold outlines, elongated eyes, intricate floral borders, and vibrant natural colors, Pattachitra paintings narrate sacred stories from the epics and celebrate the divine forms of Jagannath, Krishna, Durga, Ganesha, and other deities. These artworks are not just decorative wall pieces, they are living carriers of ritual, storytelling, and devotion.
Perfect for home temples, living rooms, meditation spaces, and meaningful gifting, Pattachitra wall art brings heritage, color, and spiritual depth into modern homes.
🔸Painted on treated cotton cloth using tamarind seed paste, chalk, and gum
🔸Drawn with bold black outlines and filled with mineral and natural pigments
🔸Minimal background, dense foreground storytelling within floral borders
🔸Themes from the Ramayana, Mahabharata, and the worship of Jagannath
🔸Practiced traditionally in artisan villages like Raghurajpur
🔸Jagannath Trio, Jagannath, Balabhadra, Subhadra, Ideal for Home temples, spiritual walls
🔸Krishna Leela, Childhood pranks, Raas Leela, flute scenes, Ideal for Living rooms, devotional corners
🔸Ramayana and Mahabharata, Epic storytelling panels, Ideal for Statement heritage decor
🔸Devi Forms, Durga, Kali, Saraswati, Ideal for Festive and ritual spaces
🔸Decorative Panels, Floral, mythic motifs, Ideal for Artistic wall accents
🔸Surface: Treated cotton cloth scroll
🔸Style: Painted with natural colors
🔸Appeal: Vibrant, traditional wall art
🔸Surface: Etched palm leaves stitched together
🔸Style: Fine line engraving
🔸Appeal: Intricate, earthy, collectible
Both forms follow the same iconographic discipline and are created by trained artisan families.
🔸Visible brush lines and hand detailing
🔸Natural color texture (slightly coarse to touch)
🔸Traditional borders and profile faces with large eyes
🔸Mythological or devotional storytelling format
🔸Sourced from established artisan communities of Odisha
After completion, artists gently heat the painting and apply a natural lacquer coating. This traditional process preserves the colors, adds a subtle sheen, and ensures the artwork lasts for decades without fading.
Its disciplined style, natural pigments, mythological storytelling, and centuries-old artisan tradition make it one of India’s most distinctive folk arts.
Odisha, especially Puri and Raghurajpur, is the historic center of this art form.
Patta means cloth, and Chitra means painting, painting on cloth scroll.
Artists prepare pigments from conch shells, lamp soot, stones, leaves, and natural binders like tamarind seed paste.
Look for hand-drawn detailing, natural color texture, traditional themes, and purchase from a trusted source connected to artisan communities.
Yes. It pairs beautifully with both traditional and contemporary interiors as statement heritage wall art.
Bring home an authentic Pattachitra painting and own a piece of Odisha’s sacred storytelling tradition, where every line, color, and motif carries centuries of devotion and artistry.
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