Mithila Museum
Workshops
Allowing painting traditions to be experienced as living practices rather than distant objects — through making, observation, storytelling, and reflection.
The Workshop Programme
Hands-On, Intellectually
Grounded, Intergenerational
The workshop program would be designed for a range of audiences — seeking to create experiences that help participants engage with Mithila painting through making, observation, storytelling, and reflection.
Workshops are envisioned as one of the most important public-facing parts of the Mithila Museum initiative because they allow painting traditions to be experienced as living practices rather than distant objects.
Designed For
First Programme
Introductory
Workshops
These workshops would introduce participants to the visual language of Mithila painting, including line work, composition, symbolism, recurring motifs, and color structures.
They would help audiences understand that Mithila painting is not just about style, but about meaning, narrative, and visual rhythm.
Second Programme
Symbol & Storytelling
Workshops
Because Mithila painting carries deep layers of symbolic communication, workshops may focus on how paintings express ideas such as protection, fertility, celebration, nature, devotion, or memory.
These sessions could invite participants to think about how visual traditions carry stories across generations.
Third Programme
Family & Intergenerational Workshops
Workshops could create shared space for parents, children, grandparents, and extended families to explore painting as a way of talking about heritage, migration, home, and memory.
This could be especially meaningful for South Asian and broader AAPI communities seeking intergenerational cultural connection.
Fourth Programme
Artist-Led Workshops
A major goal would be to host workshops led by practicing artists and culture-bearers. These sessions would not only teach process, but also offer insight into artistic lineage, material practice, and the evolving life of the tradition.
Not only teaching process — but sharing the living knowledge of a tradition.
Fifth Programme
Comparative AAPI
Workshops
One of the most innovative possibilities for the museum lies in workshops that bring Mithila into conversation with related painting traditions across AAPI communities.
These could include sessions exploring shared themes such as auspicious imagery, household symbolism, narrative picture-making, and ritual visual language across traditions.
Minhwa
Korean folk painting tradition of auspicious symbolism & household imagery.
Nianhua
Chinese New Year prints connecting ritual, memory & community.
Đông Hồ Painting
Vietnamese woodblock tradition of narrative picture-making.
Connecting Traditions
Across Asia
Sixth Programme
Youth & Innovation Labs
The museum could also develop future-focused workshops for younger generations where participants explore how inherited painting traditions can inform new creative formats.
These programs would help position the museum as a place where tradition and contemporary creativity actively meet.
Murals
Large-scale public painting rooted in Mithila visual language.
Animation
Bringing traditional motifs and symbols into motion.
Digital Illustration
Translating inherited patterns into digital creative tools.
Interactive Storytelling
Narrative experiences built around Mithila themes and imagery.
Projection Work
Mithila visual language at architectural and community scale.
Community Design
Collaborative design projects drawing on shared visual heritage.
Visual Identity Projects
Using Mithila vocabulary to shape contemporary visual identities.
The Purpose
Where Tradition and
Contemporary Creativity
Actively Meet.
Mithila Museum — Workshops Programme