National Museum of Asian Art, East Building
Of the Hills: Pahari Paintings from India’s Himalayan Kingdoms
April 18, 2026 – July 26, 2026
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Of the Hills: Pahari Paintings from India’s Himalayan Kingdoms Added
Of the Hills: Pahari Paintings from India’s Himalayan Kingdoms
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The tallest mountains on earth rise from the plains of northern India in a series of steep hills, snowy peaks, and narrow valleys. From the same Himalayan region arose some of the world’s most beautiful—yet least understood—works of art.
Discover the extraordinary beauty and unique history of paintings made for Hindu kings in India’s Pahari (hill) region between the 1620s and 1830s. Pahari artists worked in radically different styles ranging from lyrical and naturalistic to boldly colored and abstracted. Of the Hills: Pahari Paintings from India’s Himalayan Kingdoms illuminates new scholarship on the collaborative artist communities in which most painters worked. Learn about the political, cultural, and religious contexts of these forty-eight exquisite works, and look closely to enter a world of fine detail that delights and astounds.
Of the Hills celebrates the remarkable collection of Pahari paintings the museum acquired from renowned art historian Catherine Glynn Benkaim and Ralph Benkaim. Some of these artworks have never been exhibited publicly before. We’ve brought these rare pieces into conversation with our historic collections and paintings on loan from the Cleveland Museum of Art.
Of the Hills is accompanied by the major publication Pahari Paintings: Art and Stories and runs concurrently with Pahari exhibitions at the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Cincinnati Art Museum.
Attributed to an artist from the generation (ca. 1725–ca. 1785) after Nainsukh and Manaku; Krishna and His Family Admire a Solar Eclipse, canto 10.82, from a Bhagavata Purana (Ancient Tales of the Lord) (detail); India, Himachal Pradesh state, 1775–80; opaque watercolor on paper; National Museum of Asian Art, Smithsonian Institution, Freer Collection, Purchase from the Catherine and Ralph Benkaim Collection—Charles Lang Freer Endowment, F2017.13.5