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Excerpt:
...Far away from Indian big cities and the modern world
lies a beautiful region once known as the Kingdom of
Mithila. In this mythical region, Ramayana god-hero
Rama married princess Sita. The founders of Buddhism
and Jainism were born close by. Yet, if you ask any
Indian about Bihar, he will advise you not to go there:
'Bihar is the most backward state in India: it is corrupt,
widely illiterate and full of daccoyts, gangsters who
highjack trains or buses to rob the people of whatever
they have. Why should you go there?'
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For the paintings, of course! There, in a few tiny
farming villages, women have been painting on the mud
walls of their houses for centuries. Their works keep
recurring with each new marriage, religious ceremony
or adorning mood. They had a small audience in the Sixties
when the ritual was fixed on paper, once and for all,
for the eyes of the world to see. The stylised figures,
fierce lions with electrified manes, the human profiles
reminiscent of ancient Cretan pottery, the bright naive
colours or the 'pre-Columbian' earthy tones, appealed
to the public. You may think Mithila paintings are full
of cultural references, yet none of the painters is
aware of them! Deciphering them is like following the
traces of numerous foreign influences: past invasions
or trading routes coming together at a crossroad which
is art itself.
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