Lush — 7 museum-grade prints that set the mood. Angkor Archaeological Park spans more than four hundred square kilometres of Khmer Empire ruins outside Siem Reap — Angkor Wat remains the world's largest religious monument and appears on Cambodia's national flag. Ta Prohm is famous for silk-cotton trees whose roots embrace temple walls; Bayon in Angkor Thom carries dozens of serene stone faces; Apsara dancers appear throughout Khmer bas-relief tradition as celestial performers carved into sandstone galleries. Hindola Utsav, the swing festival, falls in the green month of Shravan, when the deity is placed on a decorated swing and gently rocked — a beloved monsoon celebration in the Pushtimarg and the Vrindavan calendar. A pichhwai (literally 'that which hangs at the back') is the painted cloth hung behind the Shrinathji deity to set the season's mood; this fusion borrows that grammar for the swing festival. Varsha-ritu, the monsoon season, is shown in Nathdwara pichwai as the rain-fed grove in full green — the season of growth, peacocks and Krishna's pastoral play in Braj. A pichhwai (literally 'that which hangs at the back') is the painted cloth hung behind the Shrinathji deity to set the season; rain-month cloths bring out groves, peacocks and clouds.