
Eagle and Peacock Art
Eagle and peacock are fire-element birds — the eagle represents Garuda's ambitio
Local term: गरुड़/मयूर चित्र — दक्षिण/दक्षिण-पूर्व (Garuḍ/Mayūr Chitra — Dakshiṇ/Dakshiṇ-Pūrva)
Modern Vastu consultants recommend eagle art for South walls in offices (ambition, leadership) and peacock art for SE walls in living spaces (beauty, fame). The recommendation aligns with colour psychology: peacock blues and greens suit the warm SE zone as cool accents.
Source: Contemporary Vastu Practice
Unique: Modern practice recommends peacock art in business reception areas (SE) for brand-image enhancement, and eagle art in CEO offices (South wall) for leadership projection.
Eagle and Peacock Art
Architectural diagram for Eagle and Peacock Art

The Rule in Modern Vastu
Ideal
S, SE
Eagle on South wall for authority spaces. Peacock on SE wall for beauty and fame.
Acceptable
E, SW
East for soaring-eagle imagery. SW for grounded-authority eagle.
Prohibited
N, NE
Fire-element bird art on North or NE walls (water-fire conflict). Aggressive predatory scenes in any room.
Sub-Rules
- Eagle painting on South wall (ambition, authority, sharp vision)▲ Minor
- Peacock painting on SE wall (beauty, fame, creative fire)▲ Minor
- Eagle or peacock art on North wall (fire-water conflict)▼ Minor
- Aggressive predatory bird art (hawk attacking prey) in any room▼ Minor

Principle & Context

Eagle and peacock are fire-element birds — the eagle represents Garuda's ambition and sharp vision, the peacock represents Saraswati's beauty and Kartikeya's valor. Both belong on the S/SE arc where fire-element energy amplifies their symbolism. North or NE placement creates fire-water conflict. The eagle should soar, not attack — ambition without aggression.
Common Violations
Eagle or peacock art on the North wall
Traditional consequence: Fire-element bird imagery in the water-element zone creates elemental discord. The assertive energy of eagles and the display-energy of peacocks conflicts with the North's quiet, receptive wealth-energy.
Aggressive predatory bird attacking prey
Traditional consequence: Depictions of violence — even natural predation — invoke aggressive energy in the domestic space. The eagle should symbolize vision, not violence. Soaring eagles are auspicious; attacking eagles are not.
How Other Traditions Compare
Relative to Modern Vastu
Vedic tradition associates the eagle with Garuda specifically — not generic birds of prey. Garuda's eagle is a protector, not a predator.
Maharashtrian tradition adds real peacock feathers (Mor Pankh) as SE decoration — the physical feather carries the same fire-element energy as the painted bird.
Tamil tradition treats the peacock as Murugan's sacred symbol — a Mayil on the SE wall is both decorative Vastu and devotional art. Tanjore-style peacock paintings with gold leaf are the premium expression.
Telugu tradition draws from Kakatiya architectural peacock motifs — the 1000-pillar temple in Warangal features extensive peacock carvings that inspired domestic peacock art.
Jain tradition prefers peacock art over eagle art — the peacock's beauty is non-violent, while the eagle's predatory nature creates subtle Himsa (violence) energy. Peacock is the Ahimsa-safe fire-bird.
Kerala tradition displays the peacock in mural-painting style with characteristic bold outlines and natural pigments — the Kerala Mayil is an art tradition distinct from Tanjore or Mughal peacock depictions.
Gujarati tradition extends peacock symbolism from textiles to wall art — the same Mor motif that adorns a Patola saree graces the SE wall as a painting or embroidered panel.
Bengali tradition extends the Mayur motif from Alpona (floor art) to wall paintings — the peacock is one of the most common Alpona subjects, making its presence on walls a natural extension.
Kalinga Pattachitra peacocks feature the characteristic bold, symmetrical style of Raghurajpur — dense patterns within the plumage that carry meditative visual complexity.
Sikh-Vedic tradition adds that the peacock represents Waheguru's artistry — the most beautiful bird as evidence of divine creative power. The Mor painting is both Vastu art and spiritual appreciation.
Terms in Modern Vastu
Universal:
Remedies & Solutions
Relocate decorative element to the South zone per Modern tradition
Modern VastuPlace eagle art on the South wall for ambition and authority symbolism
Place peacock art on the SE wall for beauty, fame, and creative energy
If eagle/peacock art is on the North wall, relocate to S/SE. Replace with flowing-water or nature imagery on the North.
Remedies from other traditions
Relocate decorative element to the Dakshina zone per Vedic tradition
Vedic VastuRelocate decorative element to the Dakshin zone per Maharashtrian tradition
HemadpanthiClassical Sources
“The Garuda (eagle) depicted on the Dakshina wall commands authority over the southern quarter. The Mayura (peacock) upon the Agneya wall invokes Saraswati's beauty and Kartikeya's valor — both are fire-birds in fire-territory.”
“Among birds of auspicious depiction: Garuda on the Dakshina wall grants Drishti Shakti (power of vision), and Mayura on the Agneya wall grants Keerti (fame). Both thrive when their fire-nature meets the fire-direction.”
“The eagle's sharp gaze from the South wall cuts through obstacles as Garuda cuts through sky. The peacock's displayed plumage on the Southeast wall draws admiration as flame draws the eye — both are Agni's winged servants.”
“Fire-birds upon fire-walls: the Garuda on Dakshina carries the householder's ambition skyward, while the Mayura on Agneya spreads the household's fame as it spreads its radiant tail.”

Check Your Floor Plan