ArchitectureJhunjhunu, Rajasthan8 May 2026
Shekhawati Baoli Stepwell Painted Fresco Rajasthan
Contributed by Swadesi Knowledge Team
The Shekhawati region of northern Rajasthan — comprising Sikar, Jhunjhunu, and Churu districts — contains the world's highest concentration of painted havelis (merchant mansions) and baoli (stepwells) decorated with fresco murals, earning the region the title of the open-air art gallery of Rajasthan. The stepwells (baoli or vav) of Shekhawati were built by the Marwari merchant families (particularly the Seth communities of Jhunjhunu, Nawalgarh, and Mandawa) from the 17th to early 20th century, with subterranean descending flights of stairs leading to the water chamber, flanked by pavilions, columns, and entire wall surfaces covered in lime-plaster fresco. The fresco subjects range from mythological episodes (Ramayana, Krishna's life) to contemporary British colonial images — steamships, trains, aeroplanes, and European figures — reflecting the global trading connections of Shekhawati Marwari merchants. The fresco technique uses natural mineral pigments in lime plaster applied wet (true fresco) on the haveli walls. Over 1,000 decorated havelis survive in Shekhawati, many in various states of decay as merchant families migrated to Mumbai, Kolkata, and London in the 20th century. Heritage conservation organisations and state tourism promote Shekhawati as a heritage circuit linking Fatehpur, Nawalgarh, Mandawa, and Ramgarh.
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baoli-stepwellrajasthanshekhawati-fresco
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