Craft Warm — 2 museum-grade prints that set the mood. Kishangarh, the small Rajasthan court that flourished in the 18th century under Raja Sawant Singh, gave Indian miniature its most idealised feminine profile — the arched brow and fish-curved eye fixed by the painter Nihal Chand and known as Bani Thani. A miniature begins long before that face: wasli paper is built up and burnished smooth with an agate stone, mineral pigments (hingul vermillion, lapis ultramarine, malachite green, orpiment yellow) are ground and bound in shell cups, and the drawing is laid in fine black-brown line with a squirrel-hair brush, 'gold' rendered as flat ochre. Marwar, the desert court of Jodhpur, is the most intense of the Rajasthan-plains Rajput schools, with ochre and deep-red grounds that suit a village craft scene almost without alteration. The kumhar (potter) and his wheel are a fixture of Rajasthan village life, throwing the matkas and surahis that keep water cool through the desert summer; the women of the household traditionally paint and decorate the finished ware.