Ophiuchus: The 13th Sign

$500.00

Legend states that the Babylonians created a 13th zodiac symbol named Ophiachus. The star pattern created an image of a man wrestling a snake. With the modern adoption of a 12-month calendar, Ophiachus was edited out. It may be where we all went wrong. Perhaps we need to embrace the snake and acknowledge that the 13th sign could change everything.

New Constellations Series

Acrylic and ink on Canson art board. 16x20 inches with a gallery style white metal frame, glass, hanger and title tag. Comes ready to hang.

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Legend states that the Babylonians created a 13th zodiac symbol named Ophiachus. The star pattern created an image of a man wrestling a snake. With the modern adoption of a 12-month calendar, Ophiachus was edited out. It may be where we all went wrong. Perhaps we need to embrace the snake and acknowledge that the 13th sign could change everything.

New Constellations Series

Acrylic and ink on Canson art board. 16x20 inches with a gallery style white metal frame, glass, hanger and title tag. Comes ready to hang.

Legend states that the Babylonians created a 13th zodiac symbol named Ophiachus. The star pattern created an image of a man wrestling a snake. With the modern adoption of a 12-month calendar, Ophiachus was edited out. It may be where we all went wrong. Perhaps we need to embrace the snake and acknowledge that the 13th sign could change everything.

New Constellations Series

Acrylic and ink on Canson art board. 16x20 inches with a gallery style white metal frame, glass, hanger and title tag. Comes ready to hang.

Ophiuchus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ophiuchus /ɒfiˈjuːkəs/ is a large constellation located around the celestial equator. Its name is from the Greek Ὀφιοῦχος "serpent-bearer", and it is commonly represented as a man grasping the snake that is represented by the constellation Serpens. Ophiuchus was one of the 48 constellations listed by the 2nd-century astronomer Ptolemy, and it remains one of the 88 modern constellations. It was formerly referred to as Serpentarius /sɜːrpənˈtɛəriəs/ and Anguitenens.