Neftaly Examines Sculpture as Cosmic Symbols
In its latest exploration of art, symbolism, and human imagination, Neftaly turns its focus to the ancient and enduring language of sculpture as cosmic symbol. Across civilizations and centuries, sculpture has served not merely as aesthetic expression but as a powerful conduit for cosmic ideas—linking earth to sky, humanity to the divine, and the physical to the metaphysical.
From the sacred geometries of Egyptian obelisks to the celestial alignments of Mesoamerican stone monuments, sculpture has often reflected humanity’s attempt to understand its place in the universe. Neftaly’s examination uncovers how form, material, and orientation were intentionally chosen to channel cosmic forces, reflect star maps, or symbolize mythic cosmologies.
This journey spans prehistoric to contemporary art, revealing how symbols like spirals, spheres, and vertical axes—embedded in sculpture—represent concepts such as creation, time, duality, and infinity. Whether it’s the silent gaze of a Moai statue on Easter Island or the sleek, abstract forms of modern sculpture inspired by astrophysics, each piece is part of a larger, symbolic dialogue between humans and the cosmos.
Neftaly invites artists, scholars, and enthusiasts to engage in this multidimensional perspective: sculpture not just as object, but as portal, prayer, and planetary metaphor. Through this lens, even the most solid stone is alive with meaning—pointing not just outward, but inward and beyond.

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