Paintings Made for Conversations
An Emotional Opening
In a quiet Telangana home, a wall does not stay silent.A painting hangs there — red like the evening sun over dry fields, lines drawn with patience, faces filled with stories. When guests arrive, they stop. They look. They ask questions. Conversations begin.
“Who is this?”“What story is this?”“Where did this come from?”
These paintings were never meant to be just decoration.They were made to speak — softly, slowly, like elders under a neem tree telling stories after sunset.
In Telangana, paintings have always been a way to talk. To remember. To pass life from one generation to another.
Cultural & Historical Background
Long before smartphones and screens, Telangana villages had storytellers. They carried stories of gods, kings, farmers, lovers, and rebels — not in books, but in paintings.
Crafts like Cheriyal scroll paintings, wall paintings, and folk narrative art were created to explain epics, local legends, and moral lessons. These paintings travelled from village to village, opening conversations in courtyards, temples, and festivals.
Each figure had meaning.Each colour had a reason.Red soil backgrounds, natural dyes, bold outlines — everything reflected Telangana’s land and life.
These paintings shaped identity. They taught children who they were, where they came from, and how their people lived.
The Making Process (Simple & Poetic)
It begins with cloth or wood.Not factory-made, but prepared by hand.
The surface is cleaned, coated, and dried under the same sun that watches over the fields. Natural colours are mixed — white from stones, black from soot, red from the soil that stains farmers’ feet.
The artisan sits cross-legged.No rush.No noise.
First comes the outline — steady hands, trained by years of practice. Then the colours, filled slowly, like filling a water pot drop by drop. Faces come alive. Eyes speak. Stories take shape.
Each painting takes days. Sometimes weeks.Not because it is difficult — but because it deserves time.
Stories of the Craftsmen
Most artisans learned this art not in schools, but on their mothers’ laps. Fathers painted, children watched. Slowly, the brush was passed on — like a family secret.
Their day starts early. After household work, they sit with their tools. Some work in small rooms, some on verandas, some under shade trees.
They don’t call themselves artists.They say, “Idi maa pani” — this is our work.
There is pride, but it is quiet.There is skill, but no show.
Even when money is less, they continue — because stopping feels like forgetting who they are.
Current Struggles
Today, these paintings struggle to survive.
Cheap printed designs flood markets. Fast-selling products replace slow-made art. Many artisans earn less than daily wage workers.
Youngsters hesitate to continue. Parents worry. “Ee kala tho bathaka galava?” — Can you live with this art?
Awareness is low. Appreciation is high, but only in words.
The biggest struggle is not lack of talent — it is lack of understanding.
Government Initiatives & Ground Reality
The government has introduced schemes, exhibitions, GI tags, and training programs. Some artisans benefit. Some find new hope.
But on the ground, challenges remain. Not everyone reaches these platforms. Middlemen still take big shares. Payments are delayed. Exposure is uneven.
Efforts exist — but the journey is long.
Why This Craft Matters Today
These paintings matter because they carry Telangana’s voice.
They are sustainable — natural colours, slow processes, zero waste.They preserve stories that textbooks forget.They remind us that art is not luxury — it is memory.
In a world moving fast, these paintings ask us to pause. To listen.
Customer Perspective
When someone brings such a painting home, something changes.
It does not just fill a wall — it fills the room with meaning. Guests ask questions. Children listen. Elders smile.
It becomes a bridge between past and present. Between maker and viewer. Between soil and soul.
You don’t just see it.You talk about it.
A Gentle Call to Awareness
These paintings were never made to shout.They whisper.
They ask us to look beyond price tags. To respect the hands behind the art. To understand the time, the life, the story inside each line.
Supporting traditional crafts is not charity.It is respect.
As long as these paintings continue to create conversations, Telangana’s heart will keep speaking — through colour, story, and quiet pride.
To know more about this living heritage, visit:https://bathikpaintingsiddipet.com
Related Craft Links (Explore & Learn)
https://cheriyalscrollpainting.com
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https://lacbanglescharminar.com
https://cottondurrieswarangal.com
https://nirmaltoycrafts.com
https://zarizardosihyderabad.com
https://handembriderynagaram.com
https://handembriderynizamabad.com
https://bobbinlacestationghanpur.com
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Telangana, the youngest state in India, is renowned for its rich cultural heritage, scenic beauty, and world-famous handicrafts. Its traditional arts include Cheriyal Paintings, Nirmal Toys, hand embroidery (Nagaram, Nizamabad), Bobbin Lace, Banjara Embroidery, Zari–Zardozi, cotton durries, lac bangles, Baithak paintings, Ikat, pearl jewellery, intricate stone carvings, and hand-printed cotton textiles, each deeply rooted in tradition and craftsmanship.
The Comprehensive Handicrafts Cluster Development Scheme (CHCDS), under the Ministry of Textiles, aims to holistically develop handicraft clusters across India, including Telangana.
Supported by: The Development Commissioner (Handicrafts), the nodal agency for promoting and developing the Indian handicrafts sector, focused on artisan empowerment, market expansion, and sustainable livelihoods.
Executed by: The Andhra Pradesh Productivity Council (APPC), an autonomous non-profit organization established in 1958 by the Government of Andhra Pradesh, implementing the project in Telangana through consultancy, micro-enterprise development, skill development, training, surveys, energy audits, and rural livelihood initiatives.
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