Divya Trimurti — Brass Vishnu Sacred Attributes Panel Set

Three panels. Three attributes. One complete divine presence.

₹3500.00₹3200.00

He does not need to be depicted in full form to be present. The ancient Indian tradition understood this long before modern art theory — that a symbol can carry more power than a likeness. What is suggested is sometimes more complete than what is shown.

Lord Vishnu — the preserver and sustainer — has four primary attributes: the Shankha, Chakra, Gada, and Padma. The Shankha and Chakra are the most recognisable and charged with his divine identity. Between them rises the Namam, the sacred tilak of Vishnu.

This handcrafted brass triptych — designed for unified display — is one of the most sophisticated wall art pieces in the Sepia India collection. It rewards both devotees and design-conscious homeowners with a quality of completeness that most wall art lacks.

Panel One — The Shankha: The divine conch of Vishnu, depicted in the Panchajanya form, rises from a detailed lotus base set against a richly stippled background. The Shankha is not just depicted; it is celebrated.

Panel Two — The Namam: The sacred U-shaped tilak of Lord Venkateswara is at the centre of the triptych, rising boldly from a stippled field flanked by four lotus blooms. The Namam is rendered in strong relief for immediate visibility.

Panel Three — The Chakra: The Sudarshana Chakra, the spinning disc of divine order, is depicted as a multi-pointed star wheel with the Shankha symbol on the left and lotus blooms at the corners. Together with the first panel, it frames the Namam.

Each panel has a precise dot-and-circle frame, creating a unified visual identity rather than three separate pieces. The result is a horizontal sacred frieze of extraordinary completeness.


The Kalpavriksha, the wish-fulfilling tree, appears in Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain cosmology — a model for human understanding. Every civilization that studies a tree recognises its abundant nature.

This handcrafted brass Kalpavriksha sculpture embodies that truth — crafted by Aligarh artisans, it stands on a base engraved with root patterns. The trunk rises strong, branching into detailed foliage, representing a prime tree that gives abundantly.

Look closely and you will find a small bird in the upper branches — a craftsman’s signature reminding us that a living tree is never empty.

The crown's cutout nature means it changes with light; in morning light it is gold, deepening to bronze at night. The tree breathes differently through the day.

Dimensions: 15 cm x 15 cm each
Total weight: 1.6 kg
Material: Pure brass — antique finish
Set includes: Three square panels — Shankha, Namam, Chakra
Mounting: Multiple wall mount holes on each panel
Arrangement: Left to right — Shankha | Namam | Chakra
Made in: Aligarh, India
Finish: Antique — warm muted gold with deep shadows in stippled background and relief elements

  • Triptych format — three panels as one composition — rare in brass wall art

  • Stippled dot-punched background — thousands of individually placed dots — extraordinary craft

  • Unified border — matching dot-circle border across all three — coherent visual language

  • Three primary Vaishnava symbols — Shankha, Namam and Chakra — complete devotional set

  • Lotus motifs at every corner — nine lotus blooms across the three panels

  • 1.6 kg of solid brass — substantial weight distributed across three serious pieces

  • Antique finish — the stippled background deepens dramatically — rich texture

  • Temple frieze quality — horizontal composition echoes South Indian temple interior walls

  • Handcrafted in Aligarh — stippling at this density is slow, meditative, skilled work

  • Pooja room feature wall — the complete Vaishnava sacred composition

  • Living room accent wall — three panels installed as a gallery-style horizontal triptych

  • Corridor wall — the sacred frieze as you move through the home

  • North or east wall — Vastu auspicious placement for Vishnu

  • South Indian homes — deeply resonant cultural and devotional connection

  • Vaishnava devotional spaces — temples, prayer rooms, meditation spaces

  • Gifting — Vaikuntha Ekadashi, Brahmotsavam, housewarming, Diwali

  • Corporate gifting — for Vaishnava devotees and South Indian professionals