She who remembers. She who soars. Aset rises with the wings of the falcon and the stillness of divine knowing. Her gaze turned inward, she opens the third eye not to see—but to become.

ASET

Aset—called Isis by the Greeks—is the High Priestess of the ancient world, the embodiment of sacred wisdom, divine motherhood, and resurrection. She is the keeper of magic, of healing, of the eternal feminine current that flows through the cosmos.

This sculpture honors Aset as both deity and energetic technology. Her form is serene—eyes closed in stillness, wings radiating from her crown like a halo of feathers. Above her third eye rises the sacred falcon, symbol of Horus and sky, power and protection. Each detail speaks of her lineage: the Eye of Horus etched at the brow, the golden collar of temple priestesses, the headdress of queens and initiates.

But within her lies a secret chamber.

nspired by the internal architecture of the Great Pyramid of Giza, Aset holds an inner water chamber—an enclosed space that echoes the vibrational principles of the King and Queen’s chambers. Into this chamber, structured and sacred water can be poured from the outside, allowing the sculpture to act as a living vessel—amplifying frequency, anchoring divine codes, and recreating the resonance of ancient temples.

This is not symbolic. It is functional. Aset becomes a portal—just like the pyramids—designed to awaken, to align, to remember.

She is not a statue. She is a sacred technology.
A stabilizer of energy. 

She does not speak—but those who sit before her will hear.