Skip to main content

Symbolism and significance of Lion have adorned human culture since time immemorial. From Asia to Africa to Europe – all kinds of representations of this ferocious cat have been a staple across civilizations.

In ancient India, the king's throne was known as the Simhasan (The Lion Throne). In Indian yoga, a practice as old as civilization, Simhagarjanasana represents the Roaring Lion Pose. Images of lions have adorned the gates of royal palaces across the world and can be seen atop pillars, etched on swords, and carved on stones. They have served as emblems, been associated with Gods, inscribed in heraldry, penned in literature and greatest poems, and stroked in most beautiful pieces of ancient art.

Popular culture today still holds its place for the glorification of Lions - from art to movies, from music to tattoos - Lion represents masculinity and courage. The close association of lions with such a shower of importance has a reason. Everyone knew that the lion was the king of all beasts, king of the jungle, the greatest predator, on top of the food chain with no natural enemy. If an enemy arose at all, it would often be another Lion. An equal match or nothing.

And ironically, despite all these celebrations, we have also conveniently driven them close to extinction. Today, lions are extinct in 26 African countries, have vanished from over 95 percent of their historic range. As few as 20,000 are left in the wild. To put it in context, we humans – as of today – are about 8 billion strong. The Alpha found a match in the exploits of humans.

"Our imprint is now truly global. Our impact is now truly profound. Our blind assault on the planet has finally come to alter the very fundamentals of the living world. The living world is a unique and spectacular marvel yet the way we humans live on earth is sending it into a rapid and dangerous decline. " - David Attenborough

Artist: Subodh Shetty

Edition: 29/35

Gear: Nikon D6 Nikkor 400 2.8

Location: Masai Mara - Kenya

Year Taken: 2022

TRAILBLAZER V2 collection image

‘TRAILBLAZER’– 35/35 Iconic Editions featuring ‘The King of the Savannah’ plus a surprise 1/1 showcasing the most pristine sunset of the Masai Mara raffled to a lucky collector as chosen by GACHA.

Category Photography
Contract Address0x5eba...8843
Token ID30
Token StandardERC-721
ChainEthereum
Creator Earnings
15%

PATHFINDER #29

visibility
33 views
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
    Expiration
    From
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
    Floor Difference
    Expiration
    From
keyboard_arrow_down
Event
Price
From
To
Date

PATHFINDER #29

visibility
33 views
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
    Expiration
    From
  • Price
    USD Price
    Quantity
    Floor Difference
    Expiration
    From

Symbolism and significance of Lion have adorned human culture since time immemorial. From Asia to Africa to Europe – all kinds of representations of this ferocious cat have been a staple across civilizations.

In ancient India, the king's throne was known as the Simhasan (The Lion Throne). In Indian yoga, a practice as old as civilization, Simhagarjanasana represents the Roaring Lion Pose. Images of lions have adorned the gates of royal palaces across the world and can be seen atop pillars, etched on swords, and carved on stones. They have served as emblems, been associated with Gods, inscribed in heraldry, penned in literature and greatest poems, and stroked in most beautiful pieces of ancient art.

Popular culture today still holds its place for the glorification of Lions - from art to movies, from music to tattoos - Lion represents masculinity and courage. The close association of lions with such a shower of importance has a reason. Everyone knew that the lion was the king of all beasts, king of the jungle, the greatest predator, on top of the food chain with no natural enemy. If an enemy arose at all, it would often be another Lion. An equal match or nothing.

And ironically, despite all these celebrations, we have also conveniently driven them close to extinction. Today, lions are extinct in 26 African countries, have vanished from over 95 percent of their historic range. As few as 20,000 are left in the wild. To put it in context, we humans – as of today – are about 8 billion strong. The Alpha found a match in the exploits of humans.

"Our imprint is now truly global. Our impact is now truly profound. Our blind assault on the planet has finally come to alter the very fundamentals of the living world. The living world is a unique and spectacular marvel yet the way we humans live on earth is sending it into a rapid and dangerous decline. " - David Attenborough

Artist: Subodh Shetty

Edition: 29/35

Gear: Nikon D6 Nikkor 400 2.8

Location: Masai Mara - Kenya

Year Taken: 2022

TRAILBLAZER V2 collection image

‘TRAILBLAZER’– 35/35 Iconic Editions featuring ‘The King of the Savannah’ plus a surprise 1/1 showcasing the most pristine sunset of the Masai Mara raffled to a lucky collector as chosen by GACHA.

Category Photography
Contract Address0x5eba...8843
Token ID30
Token StandardERC-721
ChainEthereum
Creator Earnings
15%
keyboard_arrow_down
Event
Price
From
To
Date