Christ Goddess

Artwork:

The Writing:

The Christ Goddess

When we look at Jesus Christ not only as a historical figure, but as a human expression of spiritual ascension, a being embodying divine love and truth, we glimpse something beyond religion. Long before institutions and churches were built around his name, Jesus was known for a way of being rooted in unconditional love, inner freedom, and non-judgment. His teachings invited us to open the heart fully and free the mind from fear and condemnation, of self and others alike.

Yet, there’s a vast difference between understanding spiritual principles and living them. Many study and memorize scripture, but far fewer embody the teachings in daily life. Jesus, in this light, can be seen as a master practitioner, not of doctrine, but of transformative presence. He spoke not of salvation through external structures, but of inner rebirth, a path from suffering to peace, from hell to heaven, made possible by one’s own way of being.

As a young artist, my first creative love was the work of Salvador Dalí. His surrealism, his sensual treatment of form and space, and his visionary depictions of the spiritual world awakened something profound in me. I remember visiting the Dalí museum in Spain as a young man and standing before his painting of Christ, utterly overcome by its presence. These were not mere images; they were portals. They stirred something eternal within me. They sparked a fire in the soul and launched me toward the unknown, a desire to create art that could open dimensional doorways in the viewer’s consciousness, lifting them toward light rather than shadow.

In my own journey, however, my first encounter with the divine came not through a masculine figure, but through a woman. I was about seven years old, and the moment was unmistakable. As I matured and devoted myself to exploring the mystery beyond the known, I noticed a recurring theme: the divine, in most traditions and depictions, was almost always male. The figures of liberation, wisdom, and power were nearly always expressed through masculine forms.

This realization marked a turning point in my work. It became a central part of my life’s purpose to reveal the divine through the feminine. It was not something I chose intellectually, it was a calling I felt in the depths of my being. And I followed it.

In time, through the sacred collaboration with muses and co-creators, I came to experience something extraordinary: the feminine embodiment of what I understand as Christ Consciousness. This was not merely symbolic, it was real, alive, present. And from that encounter, a new vision emerged: The Christ Goddess.

This work is born from the understanding that divine consciousness transcends gender. Jesus as a divine archetype is not bound to masculine form. The essence of Christ, the energy of love, liberation, transcendence, and truth, can and does manifest in feminine form as well. And so, what began as a calling became a devotion: to give form to this sacred vision of the feminine Christ, not as an alternative, but as an expansion, an evolution.

The Christ Goddess is the realization of this vision. A reflection of divine presence in feminine form. A rebalancing of archetypes. A sacred mirror for our times.