Description
Veera Ganapathy — The Warrior Form of the Remover of Obstacles
Chola Panchaloha Sculptures — Crafted for Time, Consecrated for Eternity
Where Dynasties Built, and Lineages Remembered
Empires rise with armies.
But civilisations endure through art.
The Chola Dynasty did not merely rule India—they redesigned the soul of a land. Their power was not only in conquest, but in creation. They raised granite into prayer. They turned bronze into breath. They transformed devotion into architecture that still governs time.
Yet even kings pass.
What remains are the hands that made their dreams immortal.
At a profound intersection of ancestry and artistry emerges the Gurunathan Stapathy lineage —not behind history, not beside it—but within its very core.
A Bloodline Older Than Thrones
Long before surnames became identities, this lineage became a responsibility. Passed not through wealth, but through knowledge held in the body—how to listen to stone, how to measure divinity, how to summon form from fire.
Generation after generation, the Gurunathan parampara carried:
- The mathematics of sacred proportion
- The grammar of divine posture
- The alchemy of Panchaloha
- The silence required to shape gods
Empires changed. Borders redrew.
But the hands never forgot.
Kings Commission. Stapathis Consecrate.
Kings ruled the land.
Stapathis ruled the unseen order behind it.
The Brihadeeswara Temple at Thanjavur.
The cosmic symmetry of Gangai Konda Cholapuram.
The poetic stone of Dharasuram.
The eternal flame of Swamimalai.
These were not constructed like buildings.
They were revealed like mantras—through discipline, geometry, fire, and fasting.
And when the temples were complete, the kings departed.
The Stapathis stayed.
Swamimalai — Where Earth Learned to Breathe as Metal
When a few chosen families remained in Swamimalai, they did not inherit land.
They inherited Vandal Mann—the rare sacred sediment that could hold wax like memory and fire like destiny. From this soil emerged the lost-wax Chola bronzes—idols born once in devotion, and once in flame.
No moulds.
No duplication.
Each deity was a singular birth.
This is how the gods continued to arrive on Earth long after the Chola crown vanished.
The Genealogy Frame Is Not a Family Record
What you see here is not ancestry.
It is a continuity of consciousness.
Each name marks a carrier of:
- Temple science
- Panchaloha alchemy
- Iconographic purity
- Shilpa Shastra fidelity
- And cosmic responsibility
Some of them received national awards.
All of them received something greater:
The burden of divine continuity.
Art Was Never Decoration in India
In our land, art was not for walls.
It was for weather, fertility, law, courage, rain, disease, birth, death, and destiny.
Architecture was not real estate.
It was spiritual engineering.
Sculpture was not luxury.
It was energy architecture—designed to influence consciousness across centuries.
That is why kings bowed before Stapathis.
Because temples outlived thrones.
What This Lineage Truly Represents Today
In an age of speed, this lineage moves at the pace of eternity.
While the modern world mass-produces identity, this parampara protects uniqueness. While the present discards heritage for convenience, this lineage absorbs centuries without dilution.
Every sculpture emerging today from this bloodline is not a product.
It is a historical continuation event.
Legacy Is Not What You Leave Behind
Legacy is what continues to act after you are gone.
Land will divide.
Money will exhaust.
Names will fade.
But somewhere in your bloodline, centuries from now, a child will stand before a Panchaloha deity and feel strength without knowing why.
That strength will not be accidental.
It will be engineered across generations.
That is the kind of future this lineage has always built.
A Sovereign Presence of Power, Protection, and Victorious Energy
This towering Veeraganapathy is the Rarest Panchaloha Manifestation of Power and Protection
Some deities remove obstacles.
Veera Ganapathy destroys them.
Towering at an imposing 6 feet, and weighing a commanding 500 kilograms, this monumental Panchaloha sculpture of Veera Ganapathy is not merely an idol—it is a sentinel of strength, righteousness, and divine command. This is the warrior form of Ganesha, worshipped exclusively by kings, queens, generals, and custodians of empires.
This form does not whisper blessings.
It declares victory.
Rare in iconography and even rarer in temple-grade Panchaloha creation, Veera Ganapathy stands as the protector of the righteous and the annihilator of evil forces. His multiple powerful arms bear divine weapons, each symbolising the destruction of fear, ignorance, injustice, and inner chaos.
Only a handful of such sculptures exist in the world.
Forged Through Fire, Faith & Ancient Science
This sculpture is created using the sacred Chola lost-wax process, where the idol is born twice—first in wax, then in molten Panchaloha. Every proportion follows the Shilpa Shastra’s palm-leaf measurements of 124 sacred divisions, ensuring the deity’s form aligns with cosmic geometry.
Panchaloha Composition:
- Copper – 82%
- Brass – 15%
- Tin – 3%
- Trace Gold & Silver for auspicious resonance and spiritual luminosity
No moulds.
No duplication.
No shortcuts.
What exists here is absolutely singular.
Finish, Feel & Energetic Authority
- Material: Panchaloha (A composition of 5 sacred metals/alloys)
- Finish: Antique / Bronze Finish
- Colour: Deep stormy brown with layered green-gold patina
- Sound: When gently struck, the tone is deep, commanding, and temple-grade
- Density: Immense weight that anchors space and energy
- Aging: Develops a natural sacred green patina—an inheritance of time and devotion
The presence is undeniable.
It fills space with authority, protection, and unwavering strength.
Why Elite Collectors Seek Veera Ganapathy
This is not decorative art.
This is spiritual fortification.
Ideal for:
- Royal private temples
- Legacy estates
- Industrial and corporate sanctums
- Heritage homes of stature
- Generational wealth spaces
Veera Ganapathy represents:
- Fearless leadership
- Victory over enemies seen and unseen
- Unshakeable protection
- Success earned through strength and righteousness
This is the deity warriors prayed to before entering battle.
This is not an object meant for a lifetime.
It is meant for many lifetimes.
This Veera Ganapathy will remain long after we are gone—standing through a thousand years and more, witnessing generations rise, fall, rebuild, and rise again. It will become the silent centre of your lineage, absorbing prayers, fears, victories, and gratitude across centuries.
Somewhere in your bloodline, decades from now—or even centuries—a child will be born. A child who knows nothing of today’s transactions, titles, or balances. Yet that child will draw unseen strength from this very presence, shaped quietly by a force older than memory itself.
This is true legacy.
Not land that gets divided. Not wealth that disappears in three generations.
But a living symbol of pride, power, protection, and blessing—handed down uninterrupted, generation after generation.
What you place in your space today,
becomes the strength of your descendants tomorrow.
Patron Note / Collectors’ Classification
- Temple-Grade Panchaloha Sculpture
- Warrior Deity Iconography
- Museum-Scale Masterpiece
- Extremely Rare Form
- Once-in-a-generation Acquisition
There will never be another identical Veera Ganapathy.
The lost-wax tradition makes every such sculpture irrepeatable.
Investment of Power & Legacy
- Height: 6 Feet
- Weight: 500 KG
- SKU: VHS-GS-02
- Material: Panchaloha
- Finish: Antique / Bronze
Price: ₹18,00,000 (₹18 Lakhs) (Break up of your investment: 78% of this is directly paid to the Stapathi. 10% as marketing investments towards increasing art awareness, promoting heritage, preserving and reviving sculptural legacies . 7% towards administrative expenses. 5% towards our profits).
GST 5% or as applicable is payable in addition.
Logistics and Shipping at actuals calculated at the time of order.
This is not a purchase made for display.
This is an acquisition made for dynasties.
Generations from now, this will not be spoken of as an artwork.
It will be spoken of as a protector that entered a lineage.


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