Some symbols are designed.
Others are discovered.
Throughout history, artists, mystics, architects, mathematicians, and visionaries have observed that certain forms seem to emerge repeatedly across cultures, traditions, and disciplines. Spirals, stars, knots, lattices, mandalas, sacred ratios, geometric solids, sigils, and symbolic diagrams often appear not merely as decoration, but as expressions of relationship and pattern.
Within the work of Codex Porta XI, geometry occupies a special place.
A symbol is not always simply an image.
Sometimes it is a map.
Sometimes it is a memory.
Sometimes it is a vessel through which relationships become visible.
Many of the diagrams, constructions, and symbolic forms explored throughout the Codex emerge from larger architectures of correspondence. A single figure may simultaneously express mathematical proportion, symbolic relationship, ritual function, cosmological structure, and personal insight. As mappings become more refined, entirely new constellations of meaning may emerge.
For this reason, this forum welcomes both artistic expression and symbolic exploration.
You are invited to share:
• Sigils and symbolic designs
• Sacred geometry and mathematical constructions
• Ritual diagrams and temple designs
• Illustrations inspired by esoteric traditions
• Digital art, paintings, sculpture, and craftwork
• Personal symbolic systems and experiments
• Research into historical symbols and their meanings
• Works in progress and evolving studies
No particular tradition is required.
Some members may approach symbolism through Enochian studies, Hermeticism, Kabbalah, alchemy, astrology, mythology, or sacred geometry. Others may approach it through personal experience, artistic practice, mathematics, philosophy, or simple curiosity.
All are welcome.
When sharing your work, consider including a few words about its inspiration or construction.
What relationships were you exploring?
What patterns emerged?
Was the form intentionally designed, intuitively discovered, or revealed through a larger process?
The conversation surrounding a symbol is often as valuable as the symbol itself.
A finished work may represent only a single moment within a much larger journey of discovery.
May this gallery become a place where imagination and structure meet, where symbols are explored with both creativity and care, and where beauty serves understanding as much as expression.
For every line connects to another.
Every form participates in a larger pattern.
And every pattern hints at a deeper geometry waiting to be seen.