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GLOBAL SHANANIGANS

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Singha Bersayap
More than a sacred effigy, the winged lion is a guardian of sanctified ground, positioned where temple walls, gateways and stairways begin to separate the sacred from everything beyond it. The Singha Bersayap, its wings arched like frozen shadows, stands watch at the threshold between worlds. It rises against dark spirits, corruption and malevolent forces, its stillness carved into the architecture as an enduring warning that not everything is permitted to cross.
Shannon


Neak Pean Water Temple
Neak Pean is a late 12th century water temple built during the reign of King Jayavarman VII, set alone in the middle of a vast reservoir near Angkor. Unlike most Khmer temples, it was conceived around water as a force of healing and purification, believed to restore balance and relieve illness through sacred contact. Entwined naga serpents wrap tightly around its base, binding the unique shrine into a single symbolic form, from which the temple takes its name.
Shannon


Lumbung Temple
Dating back to the 9th century, Lumbung Temple rises quietly from the green fields of Central Java, a compact Buddhist sanctuary often overshadowed by the dramatic silhouette of the Hindu towers within the nearby Prambanan Temple complex. Built from dark volcanic andesite, its weathered shrines have endured centuries of monsoonal rain, seismic unrest and drifting ash from Mount Merapi, its origins all but erased by the scars of time.
Shannon


Nandi The Sacred Bull
The seated bull has endured as one of the most recognisable forms in sacred art and temple architecture for over 3400 years. Nandi, the sacred companion of Shiva, stands at the centre of this tradition, embodying devotion, stillness and controlled strength. From Bali and the Khmer Empire to Ancient Egypt, this enduring form persists across centuries, religions and civilisations as a lasting symbol of sacred power.
Shannon


The Stone Reliefs of Borobudur
For over a millennium, Borobudur Temple has stood beneath the shadow of Mount Merapi, its volcanic silhouette framing one of the world’s great ancient monuments. Yet its true power lies not in the stupas above but in the vast relief panels that spiral around its walls. Carved into volcanic stone over 1200 years ago, they form a continuous visual system of Buddhist teachings, where meaning is revealed not at a glance but through movement across the monument itself.
Shannon


Puthuk Setumbu Hill
Puthuk Setumbu is a popular lookout set within one of the most culturally significant landscapes in Indonesia. From here, Borobudur Temple rises from the valley below, while the mighty Mount Merapi volcano dominates the horizon behind it. Before sunrise, the Kedu Plain fills with thick mist that erases the world beneath. As the first light breaks across the sky, vivid colours unfold overhead, gradually revealing traditional villages and green fields over the valley floor.
Shannon


Pawon Temple
Candi Pawon is a mysterious 9th century Buddhist shrine near Borobudur, aligned along a sacred axis and regarded as a jewel of Javanese architecture within the Sailendra dynasty landscape. Though small in scale, it is richly carved with protective figures and celestial beings hinting at a deeper ritual purpose, now lost to time. Despite its modest size, it shows remarkable precision in early stone craftsmanship and holds an enigmatic place within a wider spiritual design.
Shannon


The Life of Buddha
2600 years ago, Siddhartha Gautama was born into privilege, raised in a world designed to shield him from suffering. When he stepped beyond the illusion, he encountered sickness and death, abandoning everything he had been taught to become. After years of ascetic extremes, he discovered a path to enlightenment rooted in balance and clarity. Through deep meditation under the Bodhi Tree, he awakened. Buddha’s teachings reshaped how civilizations understood suffering, identity a
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Prambanan Temple
Rising from the volcanic plains of Central Java, Prambanan Temple is a 9th century Hindu masterpiece. It dominates the horizon with jagged spires and intricate carvings that summon ancient epics to life, while bas reliefs along its walls erupt with the battles of gods and demons, their divine fury immortalised in stone. After more than 1150 years, the complex endures as a striking testament to an advanced civilisation that transformed faith into monumental artistry.
Shannon


Sonobudoyo Museum
In the Sonobudoyo Museum, stone deities stare from centuries past, their gaze heavy with ritual. Shadow puppets hang frozen in mid motion, their painted faces preserving long forgotten stories. Kris daggers lie silent but potent, bearing the memory of the hands that once wielded them in ceremony and battle. Every carved inscription, sacred rite and precious artefact is someone’s voice from a vanished world, preserving the devotions and practices that once shaped civilizations
Shannon


Gedong Arca Museum
In the heart of Bali, the Gedong Arca Museum stands as a witness to millennia of human presence, gathering the island’s oldest relics in its' quiet halls and sunlit courtyards. Paleolithic tools, Neolithic carvings, ancient coffins and worn inscriptions reveal the daily life and rituals of ancestors from a time before kingdoms and Hindu temples emerged. Each artefact bridges time, offering visitors an immersive encounter with the island’s deep and layered past.
Shannon


Taman Sari Water Palace
Hidden corridors, crumbling terraces and vast bathing pools murmur of whispered secrets and forbidden encounters. At the heart of Yogyakarta, Taman Sari Water Palace conceals a labyrinth of shadowed tunnels and sun dappled gardens where royal power, private desire and strategy intertwined. Every step hints at clandestine meetings, calculated observation and the control of movement. It is a palace of secrecy and intrigue, with hidden lives and the weight of time stained into i
Shannon
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