Warli: An Art With Geometry (Workshop with Lalima Srivastava)
Price
Members: $85, Non-Members: $90
Location
Triton Museum of Art
Dates
Saturday, April 25th, 2026 from 11:30AM-3:00PM
Duration
1 Day
About the Course
Enter this workshop on Warli, an Indian folk art, and learn how to depict daily life scenes with geometrical shapes. With guidance from Lalima, you will learn the following:
Sketching the human in various poses (e.g., standing, running, sitting, or dancing)
Drawing the Tarpa Dance and the Tarpa Player
Basics of sketching a tree and its variations
Sketching huts
Creating a composition combining all of these elements, in the final parts of the workshop.
Materials will be provided for use on the day of the workshop.
History of Warli Art
Warli art originated in the Thane district of Maharashtra. It is traditionally created by tribal women. The word “Warli” comes from “warla” which means a piece of land or a field. These paintings depict daily life scenes portraying hunting, fishing and farming, festivals and dances, trees and animals. Images of human beings and animals, along with scenes from daily life are created in a loose rhythmic pattern through very basic graphic expressions : a circle, a triangle and a square, and is done only in white. Nowadays, these paintings are made on hand-made paper, usually green or brown, the color of mud-walls with white paint.
FAQ
Cancellations: The Triton Museum may cancel a class, camp, or workshop due to weather, health, an emergency, or low attendance. In those cases, the registered attendee will be notified of the cancellation as soon as possible and will be offered a refund or credit for the class.
Photography Policy: The Triton Museum reserves the right to use photographs taken during classes and workshops for publicity and media purposes. This includes but is not limited to the Triton website and social media. If you do not want yourself or your child included in these photographs, please notify Triton staff at the time of enrollment.
Questions? Please contact education@tritonmuseum.org
Your Instructor
Lalima Srivastava

Lalima is a self-taught contemporary folk artist. Trained as a professional social worker, she encountered diverse folk art forms in their natural cultural settings—an experience that deeply shaped her artistic voice. Among these, Warli art from Maharashtra and Madhubani art from Bihar left a lasting impact on her practice.
Based in Sunnyvale, Lalima began her artistic journey in 2014 after moving to the United States. Over the past decade, she has exhibited her work in various galleries and art festivals. Her distinctive style emerges from a thoughtful fusion of Warli and Madhubani styles, reinterpreted through a contemporary lens. She works on multimedia paper using watercolor, gouache, acrylics, and archival waterproof pens.
Website: https://www.lalimasrivastava.com/




