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Painted Votive Panel From Andhra Pradesh - 19th Century
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Painted Votive Panel From Andhra Pradesh - 19th Century

Painted Votive Panel From Andhra Pradesh - 19th Century

This evocative 19th-century painted teak votive panel from Andhra Pradesh has the direct, sculptural presence of true folk devotional carving, likely once hung within a tribal village home as a quiet symbol of protection and personal faith. Hand-carved in thick, stepped relief, it is centred with a pointed arched niche that reads as a domestic shrine form rather than an architectural quotation, framed by deeply receding borders and softened foliate traces at the shoulders.

What makes this panel especially compelling is the survival of its original polychrome surface, now genuinely rare to find on votive pieces of this type. Layers of earthy red, ochre and darkened pigment still sit beautifully within the recesses, catching the light and giving the carving depth and warmth that bare wood examples often lack. The edges show honest wear and paint loss from decades of handling and hanging, while the remaining colour preserves the atmosphere of a lived-in devotional object. It displays superbly on its own, or as part of a clustered wall of shrine fragments and folk panels.

  • Origin: Andhra Pradesh, India
  • Date: 19th Century
  • Material: Hand-carved teak
  • Features: Pointed arched votive niche, deeply stepped carved frame, rare surviving traces of original polychrome paint
  • Condition: Age-related wear with surface losses and patina consistent with devotional use. Restored in our UK workshops.
  • Dimensions: Dimensions: Width 14.5 Ă— Depth 4 Ă— Height 24 cm
$270.99

Original: $774.25

-65%
Painted Votive Panel From Andhra Pradesh - 19th Century—

$774.25

$270.99

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Painted Votive Panel From Andhra Pradesh - 19th Century - Image 2
Painted Votive Panel From Andhra Pradesh - 19th Century - Image 3
Painted Votive Panel From Andhra Pradesh - 19th Century - Image 4

Painted Votive Panel From Andhra Pradesh - 19th Century

This evocative 19th-century painted teak votive panel from Andhra Pradesh has the direct, sculptural presence of true folk devotional carving, likely once hung within a tribal village home as a quiet symbol of protection and personal faith. Hand-carved in thick, stepped relief, it is centred with a pointed arched niche that reads as a domestic shrine form rather than an architectural quotation, framed by deeply receding borders and softened foliate traces at the shoulders.

What makes this panel especially compelling is the survival of its original polychrome surface, now genuinely rare to find on votive pieces of this type. Layers of earthy red, ochre and darkened pigment still sit beautifully within the recesses, catching the light and giving the carving depth and warmth that bare wood examples often lack. The edges show honest wear and paint loss from decades of handling and hanging, while the remaining colour preserves the atmosphere of a lived-in devotional object. It displays superbly on its own, or as part of a clustered wall of shrine fragments and folk panels.

  • Origin: Andhra Pradesh, India
  • Date: 19th Century
  • Material: Hand-carved teak
  • Features: Pointed arched votive niche, deeply stepped carved frame, rare surviving traces of original polychrome paint
  • Condition: Age-related wear with surface losses and patina consistent with devotional use. Restored in our UK workshops.
  • Dimensions: Dimensions: Width 14.5 Ă— Depth 4 Ă— Height 24 cm

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Description

This evocative 19th-century painted teak votive panel from Andhra Pradesh has the direct, sculptural presence of true folk devotional carving, likely once hung within a tribal village home as a quiet symbol of protection and personal faith. Hand-carved in thick, stepped relief, it is centred with a pointed arched niche that reads as a domestic shrine form rather than an architectural quotation, framed by deeply receding borders and softened foliate traces at the shoulders.

What makes this panel especially compelling is the survival of its original polychrome surface, now genuinely rare to find on votive pieces of this type. Layers of earthy red, ochre and darkened pigment still sit beautifully within the recesses, catching the light and giving the carving depth and warmth that bare wood examples often lack. The edges show honest wear and paint loss from decades of handling and hanging, while the remaining colour preserves the atmosphere of a lived-in devotional object. It displays superbly on its own, or as part of a clustered wall of shrine fragments and folk panels.

  • Origin: Andhra Pradesh, India
  • Date: 19th Century
  • Material: Hand-carved teak
  • Features: Pointed arched votive niche, deeply stepped carved frame, rare surviving traces of original polychrome paint
  • Condition: Age-related wear with surface losses and patina consistent with devotional use. Restored in our UK workshops.
  • Dimensions: Dimensions: Width 14.5 Ă— Depth 4 Ă— Height 24 cm