Venkateswara Namam, Brass Tirupati Panel Wall Plaque
₹3000.00
In Andhra Pradesh, Tirumala attracts more pilgrims daily than any other sacred site. The hill of Lord Venkateswara is where devotees wait for the chance to stand before him, surrendering everything, hair, jewellery, pride, at the entrance.
The energy of that place travels with the devotee, embodied in symbols. The most recognisable is the Namam, the U-shaped tilak of Lord Venkateswara, marking the entrance of Tirupati temples worldwide and representing a profound tradition.
This handcrafted brass Venkateswara wall panel is a significant devotional piece. At its centre, the Namam rises in full relief, displayed with engraved lines for texture. It stands on a tiered base, flanked by the Sudarshana Chakra and the sacred Shankha, forming the complete identity of Lord Venkateswara.
On the far left, a devotee kneels in surrender, embodying every pilgrim who has climbed Tirumala. To the right, another devotee blows the shankha, calling attention to the divine. These two figures frame the sacred symbols like a living temple ritual.
The composition is bordered by a dot-punched frame, maintaining the scene's architectural significance, with mounting holes for easy display.
Dimensions: 24 cm x 7 cm
Weight: 850 grams
Material: Pure brass, antique finish
Form: Horizontal relief panel, sacred frieze composition
Mounting: Four-corner wall-mount holes
Made in: Aligarh, India
Finish: Antique, warm muted gold with deep shadows in all relief areas
Complete Tirupati iconography — Namam, Chakra, Shankha, devotees — the full sacred court
Horizontal frieze format — rare and temple-inspired — reads as a sacred narrative
Deep relief casting — every figure three-dimensional with depth and shadow
850 grams of solid brass — substantial and serious in a compact form
Dot-punched border — hand-placed dot frame that echoes temple relief borders
Antique finish — every shadow in the relief deepened and visible
Four mounting points — wide, stable, perfectly horizontal on any wall
Handcrafted in Aligarh — relief casting of this narrative complexity is master-level work
Pooja room — centrepiece for Vaishnava devotional practice
East wall or north wall — Vastu auspicious placement for Vishnu
Home entrance — Venkateswara's blessing at the threshold
Corridor wall — sacred art as you pass through the home
Study or meditation room — the Namam as daily alignment
South Indian homes — deeply resonant cultural and devotional connection
Gifting — Vaikuntha Ekadashi, Brahmotsavam, housewarming, Diwali
Corporate gifting — for Vaishnava devotees and South Indian professionals
