Gaja Mukuta
"Every inch tells a story. Every colour holds a meaning."
There are objects that fill a shelf, and then there are objects that fill a room. The Gaja Mukuta is unambiguously the latter.
An elephant head sculpture mounted on a sleek iron pedestal, hand-painted in the vivid, layered tradition of Indian folk art — deep crimson as the base, with a full tapestry of teal, forest green, ivory, gold, and cobalt blue blooming across every surface. The wide ears spread like ceremonial fans, each one painted with a different floral composition. The broad forehead carries a central diamond motif — the third eye — surrounded by concentric rings of lotus petals and vine scrolls. The trunk curves downward in the posture of Lakshmi's elephant — a symbol of abundance flowing freely into the home.
No two Gaja Mukuta pieces are identical. The hand-painting process means each piece is a unique original — same composition, different brushstrokes, different life. What you receive is the only one exactly like it in the world.
Place it on a console table, a shelf, or a sideboard, and the Gaja Mukuta does not compete with the room around it. It becomes the room's reason.


