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Best-selling Indian wall art from BRAHM Collection

Our Best Sellers: Indian Wall Art and Brass Sculptures

A best seller is an honest signal. It tells you what people choose with their own money, not what a brand wishes they would. BRAHM's best sellers fall into two camps: made-to-order Indian wall art rooted in devotion, and handcrafted brass you can actually use

Both sell for the same reason. They turn living Indian wall art and craft into something a global home can own, at a fair price to the artist, in a piece that outlasts the trend. 

Here are the pieces of Indian wall art and everyday brass our collectors keep coming back to.

The flagship

Lord 'Ganesh' Cut Out in Brass. Our single most-ordered piece, and the one that sits alongside Indian wall art as the entry point for most new collectors. The appeal is its restraint: the deity reduced to one polished, flowing brass form, an Om resting in the open raised palm, hand-finished in Aligarh, Uttar Pradesh. It works because it reads as sculpture first and shrine second, settling as easily into a contemporary room as a traditional one. Brass takes heat and cold without complaint. Devotion without obligation.

What makes it stay in a room is that it doesn't ask anything of the space. No dedicated corner, no flowers, no arrangement required. It holds its own on a shelf next to Indian wall art, on a console between two lamps, on a windowsill with afternoon light moving across it. The form is complete. The finish deepens slightly with time, the way good brass always does. That patina isn't wear. It's the piece settling into itself.

Polished brass Ganesh cutout sculpture from BRAHM Collection

The Indian wall art that anchors a room

  1. Pichwai – "Antaryami Mukhra": Cubist Krishna Portrait in Gold & Indigo. The highest price point on this list, and our most discussed piece of Indian wall art. Antaryami means "the inner controller"; mukhra, the face. This Indian wall art strips the Nathdwara tradition to a single geometric, closed-eyed visage in indigo and gold, a peacock feather curling at the crown. It sells to the buyer who wants Indian wall art with heritage without nostalgia: old devotion, new grammar. This wall art is hand-painted to order over roughly four weeks, and photographed for your approval before it ships. For collectors who want Indian wall art that holds a conversation, this is it.

  1. Antique Painting of Lord 'Shrinathji' (Gold). The traditional counterweight. Gold foil on cotton cloth, painted in the Pichwai style of Nathdwara, "the Gateway to the Lord," the left arm raised in the gesture of lifting Mount Govardhan. This Indian wall art sells on authenticity: real gold work, real lineage, the kind of devotional Indian wall art collectors want as an heirloom rather than a decoration. If you are building a considered collection of Indian wall art, this is the one that anchors it. Shipped in a rigid tube, fully insured.
  2. Lotus Symphony: A Pattern of Delicate Blooms Print. The way in to Indian wall art. A lush lotus pattern, coral blooms over deep teal threaded with gold, and from around $160 the most accessible Indian wall art we offer. It sells because it lowers the barrier: a contemporary design built on an old motif, at a price that asks for no leap of faith. For buyers discovering Indian wall art for the first time, this is where many start. It is the wall art that opens the door to the rest.

Everyday luxury you can use

  1. Brass Fruit Bowl Sets: Royal Court and Festival Bloom. Four brass bowls to a set, footed and scalloped, the interiors hand-painted in jewel-tone meenakari enamel, made in Moradabad. Many collectors who come to us for Indian wall art end up leaving with a brass set as well. A set sells better than a single object: more use, more value, more reasons to keep it out. They hold fruit, flowers, or nothing at all, and catch the light the way water does.
  2. Anayat Floral Plate (Set of 2). Two brass plates from Aligarh, built for offerings and small rituals. Anayat suggests care and refinement, and the work sits in the surface: an embossed floral medallion ringed by a beaded rim, all in plain brass, no colour. Often paired with Indian wall art as a gift. Quiet, useful, and priced to be bought in pairs.
  3. Heer Parrot Embroidered Curtain Tieback. A pair of green parrots, red-beaked, worked in gold beadwork, sequins and zardozi, hung from a twisted cord, handmade with BRAHM x Life n Colors. We call it functional jewellery for your curtains. It sells because it is small, affordable, and unmistakably handmade, and no two are alike. A natural companion to Indian wall art in any room.
What it tells us

Look across the list and a pattern shows itself. The best sellers are not the most traditional pieces, nor the cheapest. They are the ones that translate. A gold-foil Shrinathji wall art carries centuries of devotion; a brass Ganesh reduces that same heritage to a single modern line. Different objects, one function: they let Indian craft travel without losing itself. That is what sells at BRAHM — Indian wall art made to order, everyday brass made to last, and the occasional piece that is quietly both. If you are looking for Indian wall art that holds its value and its meaning, these are the pieces our collectors return to. The best Indian wall art doesn't ask you to explain it to your room. It simply belongs. Heritage made legible, handpicked, and built to be owned.

What makes traditional Indian craftsmanship unique?

Many Indian crafts are passed down through generations of artisan families. Techniques, materials, and motifs often date back centuries, making each piece part of a long cultural lineage rather than a mass-produced product.

What kinds of pieces does BRAHM curate?

BRAHM curates fine Indian art across regions of the country, including Pichwai paintings, bone inlay furniture, brass sculptures, silk carpets, and traditional jewellery.

Can BRAHM pieces be shipped internationally?

Yes. BRAHM offers worldwide shipping, allowing collectors and homeowners anywhere in the world to bring authentic Indian craftsmanship into their homes.

Are BRAHM pieces handmade?

Yes. Every piece in the BRAHM collection is created by skilled artisans using traditional Indian techniques that have been preserved and refined over generations.

Many artisan traditions are under pressure from industrial production. Supporting handmade craft helps sustain these communities and ensures centuries-old artistic knowledge continues into the future.

zach

Zach

I was born in Kuwait, raised between Paris and London, and now split life between Cambridge, Boston, and Chennai. I trained fast — a BA at 14, an MS at 18 — then built a career in trading and private equity before turning my eye to art and design. BRAHM is where I collect what matters: memory, beauty, and the everyday objects that carry both. I write to remember as much as to share, with my wife and my doggos keeping me anchored along the way.

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