This seven-foot Balaji shrine structure draws directly from the architectural language of Tirumala temple sanctums. The form is not merely sculptural; it is spatial. The deity stands framed within a carved mandap, creating the presence of a sanctum rather than a surface relief.
The composition centers on Lord Venkateswara in upright form, structured within pillars and crowned by an ornamental arch. The surrounding carved framework echoes temple gateway proportions — vertical columns, layered cornices, and shrine canopy detailing.
The structure holds architectural weight. At seven feet in height, it commands spatial authority suitable for:
This is not a freestanding idol alone. It is shrine architecture shaped in wood.
Human Time, Preserved.
Made Slowly. Kept Forever.
Product Overview
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Material: Solid Poola Wood
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Origin: Madhavamala, Andhra Pradesh, India
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Height: 7 ft
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Form: Temple box shrine structure with integrated deity
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Iconography: Lord Venkateswara (Balaji) within carved architectural mandap
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Technique: Hand carved deep relief and structural carving
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Installation: Floor-standing sanctum structure
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Price: 4,80,000
Origin – Madhavamala, Andhra Pradesh
Madhavamala’s carving lineage is rooted in temple architecture. Artisans in this region do not separate sculpture from structure; deities are framed within architectural grammar.
Poola wood, locally sourced, provides the necessary structural stability for tall shrine constructions. Its grain supports both fine iconographic detailing and load-bearing carved components such as pillars and arches.
This work continues that lineage — translating stone sanctum architecture into carved wood.
Craft and Process
The shrine begins with multiple seasoned Poola wood sections prepared for structural integrity.
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The base platform is constructed and stabilized.
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Vertical pillars are carved and proportioned to maintain symmetry.
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The central Balaji form is shaped within the framed axis.
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The ornamental arch is carved and fitted to crown the structure.
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Surface refinement preserves hand-tool evidence within recesses.
Though structurally assembled for stability, all visible carved surfaces are hand shaped and detailed through chiseling, not machine routing.
Time investment in works of this scale extends across sustained carving cycles, requiring disciplined sequencing rather than rapid production.