Sacred Geometry · Tantric Art · Archival Paper
The Essence of the Sacred Dot
Original hand-drawn yantra art — each piece an instrument of consciousness, drawn from the same geometry that built the universe and beyond. The yantra represents a journey inwards to the source of divinity.
The Practice
Yantra — the instrument. Bindu — the primordial point. Tatva — the essential truth. Every yantra is a map of the divine, collapsed into line and form.
A yantra is not decoration — it is a geometric body for a deity, a diagram of cosmic energy made visible through the precision of interlocking triangles, circles, and lotus petals.
Rooted in the Tantric tradition — upward triangles (Shiva) and downward triangles (Shakti) interlocked in the mathematics of creation. Each form carries the cosmos in compressed form.
On cold-pressed archival paper, the yantra is drawn with the same intention as its consecration — each line placed with meditative deliberateness, from the outer gate inward to the bindu.
The Artist
Founder & Artist, Bindutatva
Yantras found me before I found them. What began as a quiet fascination with sacred geometry slowly became a calling — a way to still the mind, honour an ancient lineage, and create something that carries real energy into a living space.
I was drawn to yantras because they sit at the intersection of mathematics, devotion, and art. Every triangle, every circle, every petal follows rules that are thousands of years old, yet drawing them by hand demands absolute presence. There is no room for distraction — only the line, the breath, and the intention behind it.
For me, creating a yantra is not illustration; it is meditation made visible. Each piece takes days of careful, deliberate work on heavy archival paper, building layer upon layer with acrylic gouache until the geometry hums with the precision the tradition demands.
My hope is simple: that every yantra that leaves my studio becomes a still point in someone's home — a reminder that the sacred can be geometric, that devotion can be drawn, and that something handmade with intention carries a presence no print ever could.
— Namita
The Craft
Each Bindutatva yantra is drawn entirely by hand — compass, ruler, fineliner. No digital assistance, no tracing. The work begins with a meditative intention, moves through the bhupura (outer gate), inward through the lotus rings, and arrives at the bindu — the central point from which all form emanates.
Drawn on cold-pressed archival paper — the same weight used by master watercolourists — the surface holds each line with permanence and depth. Each yantra is energised as per the intent of the client. Works are sealed, signed, and shipped in flat packaging.
The Collection
All works are original, one-of-a-kind. Each is signed, dated, and accompanied by a certificate of authenticity.
Investment
Standard
₹18,000
Starting price for select works
Signature
₹21,000–₹23,000
Mid-range original works
Collector
₹25,000
Masterwork pieces
Collectors Say
The Sri Yantra she drew is extraordinary. The interlocking triangles are perfectly constructed — I've seen printed versions that aren't as precise. The weight of the paper makes the whole piece feel like an artefact.
I commissioned a Lakshmi Yantra as a housewarming gift. Namita included a handwritten note explaining the symbolism of each geometric layer. The care embedded in this work is beyond anything a gallery could offer.
Own an Original
No prints. No reproductions. When a yantra finds its collector, it is theirs alone — a singular meeting of intention, geometry, and the divine.