From $89
A meditation room or a quiet corner of the living room tends to call for something steady rather than busy, and this fits that need. A protective eye symbol sits fixed at the middle of a painted starfield, deep blue and cobalt tones rolling outward like distant nebula clouds flecked with gold points of light and warm amber, a spiral slowly turning below the pale iris so the entire painting seems to drift in place.
The eye stays still through all of it. The palette leans cool, blue and purple mostly, which keeps the mood settled, and the horizontal format gives the watercolor wash plenty of room to breathe. Ten sizes are offered between 16x12 and 60x40, priced from $89.
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Printed on archival-grade, poly-cotton blend canvas with fade-resistant inks rated to hold color for 75+ years. Gallery-wrapped and ready to hang straight out of the box.
Available in sizes from 12x16 up to 40x60 inches, as a 1.25 inch canvas wrap or with a black floating frame.
Free U.S. shipping on all orders. Printed and shipped from U.S.-based facilities. Most orders arrive within 5-10 business days.
A protective eye symbol holds dead center in a painted starfield, deep blue and cobalt washes rolling outward like distant nebula clouds. Gold points of light and warm amber flecks break up the cool tones, and a slow turning spiral beneath the iris gives the whole galaxy a sense of drift, even while the eye itself stays still.
The cooler palette is what makes this watercolor galaxy piece with a protective eye settle into a meditation room rather than compete with it. Hung horizontally, the wash has room to spread across a longer wall. It sits well alongside the lion symbolism guide for anyone building a spiritual, symbol driven cosmic Egyptian eye canvas collection at home.
It works especially well there. The cool indigo and purple palette, combined with the steady, watchful eye at the center, gives the piece a calm rather than dramatic tone, which is why it's suggested for a meditation room or a quiet corner. It doesn't demand attention the way some of the bolder gold pieces do.
The spiral sits below the pale iris and gives the piece a sense of slow motion, as if the galaxy around the eye is turning. It's a visual element rather than a specific symbol tied to Egyptian mythology, meant to add depth and movement to the cosmic setting without pulling focus from the eye itself.
Yes, the indigo, cobalt, and purple in the piece were built to stay quiet rather than compete, so a room already leaning cool and calm tends to absorb it naturally. The gold stars and amber light add just enough warmth to keep it from feeling flat.