This circular stone disk presents a figure caught in ritual motion, its posture neither fully human nor entirely symbolic. The body bends inward, arms and limbs folding around a central spiral motif that appears to originate from within the torso itself. This spiral—precise, intentional, and recurring—suggests an inner current: breath, time, energy, or consciousness made visible.
The figure’s proportions feel subtly non-human. The elongated limbs, the stylized hands, and the ambiguous facial geometry evoke a being adapted to a different rhythm of existence. Rather than depicting anatomy, the carving maps function—movement, flow, transformation. Surrounding arcs reinforce the idea of cyclical passage, as if the figure is enclosed within a controlled field or ceremonial boundary.
Unlike narrative scenes meant to be “read,” this disk feels designed to be felt. It invites rotation, contemplation, and alignment, functioning as a meditative object rather than a declarative symbol. The absence of overt aggression or authority suggests a guide rather than a ruler—an entity that teaches through resonance, not command.
A compelling piece for collectors drawn to artifacts that blur the line between ritual tool and metaphysical diagram, and for those who sense that some ancient carvings describe internal technologies rather than external myths.








Reviews
There are no reviews yet.