Raja Ravi Varma fused the realism of European salons with the iconography of the Puranas, and then, in a press at Lonavla, democratized art for the Indian masses.
In 1873, an artist from a small Kerala palace sent four canvases to Vienna and won a prize. He was twenty-five. Within two decades the gods of the subcontinent looked the way he said they looked: poised, fleshly, lit from a window in a palace that didn't quite exist. Lakshmi standing on her lotus. Saraswati at her veena. Krishna, in the soft round of his foster-mother's lap.
Raja Ravi Varma made oil painting speak Sanskrit. He commanded the academic naturalism of Theodore Jensen and the dramatic pathos of late-Victorian salon painting, and made them serve the Mahabharata. And then, knowing his true audience was the Indian people themselves, he opened a lithographic press and put his goddesses within reach of every household.
"In my childhood, when Ravi Varma's age arrived in Bengal, reproductions of European paintings on the walls were promptly replaced with oleographs of his works." , Rabindranath Tagore
"There is hardly a Hindu home in this country without a print of one or another of Ravi Varma's deities." , Bal Gangadhar Tilak
"Ravi Varma was the first artist to give the Hindu pantheon a face the whole subcontinent could agree on." , Partha Mitter, art historian
What follows are six chapters: a biography, a gallery, a close reading of Shakuntala, a portrait of the Press, an essay on style, and a survey of his long shadow on Indian cinema and visual culture.
Ravi Varma is the indisputable father figure of modern Indian art., Geeta Kapur, art historian
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From a feudal palace in Travancore to the durbar halls of Baroda, the biography, told as a timeline.
Read the biographyA curated selection of his canvases, framed and captioned. Click any to look closer.
Enter the galleryA scrolling, close-reading of his most famous painting, the thorn, the glance, the lover beyond the frame.
Look closer
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How a German lithography machine and a brother named Raja put the gods on every wall in India.
Visit Lonavla
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East meets West, on canvas. And then on every poster, calendar, and matinee screen for a century after.
Trace the influence1848 to 1906, year by year, patrons, prizes, paintings, the press, and the long quiet at Kilimanoor.
See the years
The younger son of Raja Ravi Varma, Rama Varma, known across Kerala as the Artist Thampuran, inherited his father's hand and carried his discipline forward into the next century. From 1897 to 1903 he studied at the Sir J. J. School of Art in Bombay, then returned home to Mavelikara, set up his own studio, and worked alongside his father until Ravi Varma's death in 1906.
He painted portraits, history scenes, and figures from legend, among them Ajavilapam, a portrait of Sir Winston Churchill, a study of Rana Pratap, and, in 1948, a portrait of his father. Many of his canvases carry the unmistakable proportions, the cast of light, the fall of cloth that he had learned at his father's side.
"He left behind an impressive legacy as an artist, teacher, and social activist, and was the driving force behind the establishment of the Raja Ravi Varma College of Fine Arts in Mavelikara."
The school he built, known locally as the Painting School, welcomed students from every section of Keralite society. Rama Varma married Gowri Kunjamma, sister of Dewan P. G. N. Unnithan, and had ten children. The line he carried forward runs, four generations on, to the descendant who has gathered this site.
Four generations on, the line that ran from a Kilimanoor palace to a Mavelikara studio still finds its way to a desk under a window. This site is one descendant's small offering, gathering a great-great-grandfather's life into a single place so the next generation might know him.
Dr. Vishnu Ravi · 2026