“When Gods Walked with Beings from the Sky”
Buried not in sand, but in whispers and wonder, these haunting murals stir ancient questions that refuse to fade. Rendered in the unmistakable aesthetic of pharaonic Egypt — with its hieroglyphs, solar crowns, and stoic postures — these works introduce an element that defies easy classification: beings that resemble no god from any pantheon, yet command the same reverence. Slender-limbed, elongated-headed, their gaze calm yet unknowable — they seem both ancient and futuristic, alien and divine.
In the upper fresco, a woman — perhaps a priestess, queen, or chosen emissary — clasps the hand of one such visitor. They are flanked by familiar deities: Horus, Ra, and other sons of the sun. And yet, it is the alien figure that stands at the center of the exchange, suggesting parity, even honor. This is not conquest, nor fear. It is ceremony.
The lower images speak more intimately. One shows a quiet handshake between two extraterrestrials and a robed woman, her expression calm and knowing. In another, a ɴuᴅᴇ figure embraces a skeletal being whose eyes glow with melancholic affection. These aren’t moments of spectacle — they’re moments of connection. Of trust. Of something ancient humans perhaps could not describe, but dared to record.
Could it be that ancient civilizations were not only astronomers of the sky, but participants in a cosmic dialogue?
Were their gods not imagined — but remembered?
Is mythology a veil over a deeper truth we are only now beginning to lift?
Whether symbolic or literal, these images compel us to reconsider what we know of the past. Perhaps history is not a straight line, but a spiral — one that returns us again and again to the same unanswered questions.