Madhubani Classical Prints — 8 museum-grade prints on the theme. Madhubani painting — also called Mithila or bhitti chitra — developed among Maithil women who originally rendered ritual imagery on freshly plastered mud walls in the Mithila region of Bihar and adjoining Nepal. The banyan (Ficus benghalensis, vata vriksha) appears in folk panels as a village shade tree and as a tree-of-life analogue related to kalpavriksha iconography in kohbar wedding-chamber schemes, where lotus ponds, bamboo, fish, and paired birds surround auspicious union symbols. 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 Madhubani is the Mithila sub-style devoted to yantra geometry, mandala rings, and sacred symbolic forms rather than narrative festival scenes. Where Bharni fills large deity fields and Kachni textures through parallel hatching alone, Tantrik paintings function closer to visual mantras — concentric expansion from a central bindu, symmetrical axes, and colour codes tied to tantric and yogic practice.