

Todi Ragini, from a Ragamala Series
The image depicts a painting titled "Todi Ragini, from a Ragamala Series". The painting shows two women and a dog. The woman on the left wears a green dress with a brown shawl over her head and shoulders. She holds a decorated pot in each hand. The woman on the right wears an orange dress with a purple shawl over her head and shoulders. She holds her right arm up and her left hand holds a red pot. A black and white dog stands between them. The background is green with a large plant on the right. The painting has a red frame with a black border featuring a floral pattern.
Artwork Details
- Dimensions
- 636 × 893 px
- Museum Record
- View original
You May Also Like

Gaudi Ragini

A woman with attendant and a pair of deer: probably Gujari Ragini of Dipak

Kanhara Ragini: Song of Inspiration to Krishna for Killing the Elephant Demon, from the Ragamala Series

A Heroine Waiting for Her Paramour: Vasakasajja Nayika, from a Nurpur Rasikapriya

Illustration from a Ragamala Series (Garland of Musical Modes)

Todi Ragini, from a Ragamala Series

Lovers on a Terrace: Ramakali Ragini of Hindol, from a Bundi Ragamala

Ragini Patamanjari

Woman Feeding Deer: Todi Ragini, from a Ragamala

Vasanti Ragini, Page from a Ragamala Series (Garland of Musical Modes)

A woman with two children, having abandoned her home, goes into the forest where she encounters a leopard, from a Tuti-nama (Tales of a Parrot): Thirtieth Night

Ascetic Princess with Snakes in a Wilderness: Asavari Ragini, from a Ragamala

The Heroine Who Waits Anxiously for Her Absent Lover: Utka Nayika

The Lovelorn Heroine, from a Sat Sai of Bihari

Kakubha Ragini

Augury of the Crow (Vasakasajja Nayika)

Krishna Reaching for the Moon

The Heroine Who Waits Anxiously for Her Absent Lover: Utka Nayika

Vasant Ragini, Page from a Ragamala Series (Garland of Musical Modes)

Demons Fighting Over an Animal Limb

The lover of Hamnaz, who has been hanged from the gallows, bites off her nose when she kisses him, from a Tuti-nama (Tales of a Parrot): Twenty-fifth Night

Maharana Sangram Singh II (r. 1710–34) Worshipping a Linga Under a Banyan Tree

The Parrot Addresses Khujasta at the Beginning of the Seventh Night, from a Tuti-nama (Tales of a Parrot)

Farhad Kills Himself After Hearing the False News of Shirin’s Death