Devotional Grounded — 5 museum-grade prints that set the mood. Gond painting comes from the Gond Adivasi communities of central India, with its best-known school formed by the Pradhan Gond of Patangarh and the wider Dindori region of Madhya Pradesh. The contemporary form is largely the legacy of Jangarh Singh Shyam (1962–2001), whose line-and-in-fill manner — every form bounded by a bold outline, then filled with rows of dots, dashes, commas and scales — became known as Jangarh Kalam and was carried on by his family and students. Madhubani — Mithila painting from the Madhubani district of Bihar and adjoining Nepal — traditionally adorned courtyard and interior walls for weddings, festivals, and seasonal rites, with knowledge passed matrilineally among Brahmana, Kayastha, and other community lineages. William G. Tantrik is one of five historically distinct Madhubani styles — alongside Bharni, Kachni, Godna, and Kohbar — traditionally associated with Brahmin women painters in the Mithila region and characterised by esoteric deities, yantras, and sacred geometry rather than daily-life narrative. Durga as Mahishasuramardini — the slayer of the buffalo demon — is a core Shakti subject in Mithila ritual art, especially during Durga Puja and Navratri when goddess panels guard household walls.