Mithila Museum

Future
Exhibitions

Designed not only to present works of art, but to build understanding, emotional connection, and critical engagement around the tradition.

The Exhibition Programme

Five Curatorial
Directions

Future exhibitions at Mithila Museum are envisioned as one of the primary ways the initiative will bring Mithila painting to public life. The exhibition program is imagined across several curatorial directions — each one illuminating a different dimension of the tradition.

01 Foundational
02 Artist-Centered
03 Thematic
04 Comparative
05 Contemporary & Experimental
Foundational exhibitions — history and language of Mithila painting
01 Foundational

First Direction

Foundational
Exhibitions

These would introduce visitors to the core history, language, symbolism, and visual evolution of Mithila painting — helping audiences understand the origins of the tradition, the movement from wall-based and domestic contexts to paper and gallery spaces, the role of women as culture-bearers and artists, and the range of themes that animate Mithila painting.

Possible Exhibition Concepts

  • The World of Mithila Painting
  • Line, Symbol, Memory
  • Mithila: A Living Painting Tradition
  • From Ritual Wall to Contemporary Canvas

Second Direction

Artist-Centered
Exhibitions

A key goal of the museum is to ensure that artists remain visible within the interpretation of the tradition. Future exhibitions may focus on major painters, family lineages, thematic approaches, or generational shifts in style and subject matter.

These exhibitions would help audiences see Mithila not as a single uniform genre, but as a living field shaped by individual artistic voices.

Mithila as a living field shaped by individual artistic voices — not a single uniform genre.

Artist-centered exhibitions — individual voices in Mithila painting
02 Artist-Centered

Third Direction

Thematic Exhibitions

The museum envisions exhibitions that bring forward recurring ideas within Mithila painting — showing the tradition as both deeply rooted and fully capable of speaking to contemporary cultural questions.

Nature & Ecology
Marriage & Ceremony
Women's Lives & Visual Inheritance
Gods, Devotion & Cosmology
Village Memory & Domestic Space
Migration, Diaspora & Changing Identity
Contemporary Storytelling Through Inherited Forms

Fourth Direction

Comparative
Exhibitions

In carefully curated ways, the museum may also present exhibitions that place Mithila painting in dialogue with other AAPI painting traditions that share certain structural or conceptual affinities — not to flatten distinctions, but to illuminate them through comparison.

Mithila and Korean Minhwa
India ↔ Korea

Mithila and Korean Minhwa

Symbol, Home, and Protection

Mithila and Đông Hồ
India ↔ Vietnam

Mithila and Đông Hồ

Community Image Traditions Across Asia

Across Asia

Painting Memory Across Asia

A cross-cultural survey of how painting carries communal memory.

Across Traditions

Women, Ritual & the Painted Surface

The role of women as culture-bearers across Asian painting traditions.

Fifth Direction

Contemporary &
Experimental Exhibitions

As the institution grows, we envision future exhibitions that examine how Mithila painting can intersect with present-day artistic practice.

Contemporary Reinterpretation
Mural Practice
Public Art
Digital Storytelling
Animation
Design Collaborations
Youth-Led Responses
Interdisciplinary Projects

Exhibitions would not only preserve tradition—they would help reveal its future.

Mithila Museum — Future Exhibitions Programme