On a winter day in December last year, in a tranquil, tented wildlife camp, Gond artist Mithlesh Kumar Shyam spread out his brightly coloured paintings on a large wooden table. He had arrived in the morning at the camp in Bamhni village, near Kanha National Park in Madhya Pradesh, driving the roughly 150 kilometres from Patangarh in an old, family car.
There were trees, birds, tigers and other wildlife in his vivid and detailed paintings, and the rich mythology of his Gond community as well as the realities of modernity. “Sometimes, I paint from our folklore. This could be my interpretation of Bada Dev [‘great god’], our main deity, portrayed in the form of a bana [a three-stringed fiddle]. Other times, I am inspired by things and events from my daily life. I also paint from my imagination, even my dreams,” says 27-year-old Mithlesh.
Like other Gond artists, Mithlesh too has a distinctive style of executing the infilling pattern – a combination of dots, dashes and small curves that fill the larger shapes in a painting. On festive occasions, he tells me, the Gonds decorate the facades of their mud houses with traditional motifs that they believe bring good fortune. The wall art, which illustrates their deities, myths and legends, is known as Gond bitti chitra. “The colours we use for this are usually found in nature – green from the leaves of the semi plant, orange from marigold flower, yellow from sunflower, dark pink from rose, brown from gobar [cow dung], white from chuhi [white mud], black from black mud, and so on,” explains the artist.









