Pala art, artistic style that flourished in what are now the states of Bihar and West Bengal, India, and in what is now Bangladesh. Named for the dynasty that ruled the region from the 8th to the 12th century ce, Pala style was transmitted chiefly by means of bronze sculptures and palm-leaf paintings, celebrating the Buddha and other divinities.
Pala-period bronzes, which were cast by the lost-wax process, consist of an alloy of eight metals. They represent various divinities and, being mainly small in size and thus portable, were intended for private worship. In terms of style, the metal images largely continued the Gupta tradition of Sarnath but endowed it with a certain heavy sensuousness. They differ little from contemporary stone sculptures of the region but surpass them in the precise definition of ornamental detail, in a certain elegant virtuosity, and in their emphasis on plasticity. The bronze sculptures from this area played an important part in the diffusion of Indian influence in Southeast Asia.
The palm-leaf paintings of the Pala period are also noteworthy. Employed in the evocation of the deities, the paintings had to conform to the same strict iconographic rules used in the production of contemporary stone and bronze icons. The narrow leaf of the palm determined the size of the book illustrations, which were approximately 2.5 by 3 inches (about 6 by 8 cm). Threaded together and enclosed in wooden covers, the leaves were typically painted. The outlines were first drawn in black or red, then filled in with flat areas of colour—red, blue, green, yellow, and touches of white. The compositions are simple and the modelling vestigial.
The principal centres of production for both bronzes and paintings were the great Buddhist monasteries at Nalanda and Kurkihar, and the works were distributed throughout Southeast Asia, influencing the arts in Myanmar (Burma), Siam (now Thailand), and Java (now part of Indonesia). Pala arts also had a recognizable impact on the Buddhist art of Kashmir, Nepal, and Tibet.