Temple Gopuram — 2 museum-grade prints, engineered to a wall. The gopuram — from Sanskrit gopura, gateway tower — is the monumental pyramidal entrance of Dravidian Hindu temple architecture across Tamil Nadu, Karnataka, Andhra Pradesh, and Kerala, famously exemplified by the polychrome tiers of Madurai Meenakshi Amman Temple and Chennai Kapaleeshwarar Temple. Unlike Nagara shikhara spires of North India, gopurams widen visually through stacked horizontal tiers crowded with stucco deities, mythological figures, and ornamental yali balustrades. The gopuram gateway tower anchors South Indian temple architecture — tiered pyramids covered in sculpture in physical temples, here reduced to Warli triangle stack grammar. Fusion honours shared Indian sacred verticality while keeping Warli monochrome discipline from Maharashtra origin.