Shrinathji in Maroon Temple Grid- Geometric Contemporary Pichwai Art Print
Shrinathji in Maroon Temple Grid- Geometric Contemporary Pichwai Art Print
Impossible de charger la disponibilité du service de retrait
- ✔️ Ships in 4–5 days (unframed) or 7–10 days (framed)
- ✔️ Same or next-day delivery in Mumbai & Bangalore
- ✔️ Ships worldwide
- ✔️ Framing available
- ✔️ Museum grade art – lasts 80+ years
FAQ
What makes Nakhrro prints different?
They’re not posters. These are archival pigment prints on museum-grade paper or canvas.
Will I see brushstroke detail?
Yes. Our scans capture every nuance of the original hand-painted work.
Paper or canvas—which one should I pick?
Paper is smooth and matte. Canvas has texture and depth. Both are archival.
How long will it last?
With proper care, 80–100 years. Trusted by museums worldwide.
Is framing available?
Yes. We offer framing in wood, metal, or fiber on request.
Walking into a temple, painted in geometry.
Concentric rectangles in deep maroon and cream frame Shrinathji in what feels like a cross-section of sacred architecture as though you are looking through the layered doorways of a Rajasthani temple, each threshold bringing you closer to the sanctum where the deity waits.
Shrinathji is rendered in full traditional splendour — pearl garlands, ornate crown, flowing gold and saffron garments, holding a lotus — with sacred cows faintly visible at his feet.
The maroon-and-cream palette is rich and warm, evoking the sandstone and plaster walls of Nathdwara’s historic havelis.
This piece shares its DNA with the Crimson Labyrinth but with a deeper, earthier tone. Where crimson radiates intensity, maroon radiates warmth and rootedness. It feels less like modern graphic art and more like an ancient temple pattern that was always meant to exist — geometric, devotional, and timeless.
Pair it:
Display alongside the Crimson Labyrinth or Blue Grid for a cohesive geometric Pichwai gallery wall. The shared visual language creates unity while each colour palette brings its own energy.
Vastu significance:
Maroon combines the energy of red with the grounding of brown — making it ideal for spaces that need both vitality and stability. The concentric rectangles create a sense of structured, protective energy radiating inward. Shrinathji at the centre anchors the composition in devotion. Ideal for living rooms, pooja rooms, and entrance foyers.
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