Visual alchemy and esoteric artistry

MEGIN stands out for its esoteric and occult imagery, crafted to enhance each article’s theme. The Gallery showcases select illustrations from the magazine, highlighting MEGIN's distinct visual style and symbolic depth. Each piece complements the articles while also serving as standalone esoteric art, inviting viewers to explore its hidden meanings.

A painting of Gullveig-Heid-Angrboda - The shadowy matron of Norse chaos and creation. Embodied as mother, maiden, and crone, Angrboda epitomizes the cyclical essence of life, mirroring the primal forces that underpin Norse cosmology.

A surrealist painting of the myth of Trito, the hero confronts the three-headed serpent Ngwhi, who steals divine cattle, symbolizing chaos. Strengthened by an intoxicating drink and aided by the Storm-God, Trito overcomes his initial defeat to reclaim the cattle, embodying order's victory over chaos.

A painting of Pythia, veiled in mystery, sat upon Apollo's sacred tripod by the Omphalos stone. Through purifying rites and whispers of hidden fumes, she spoke the gods’ cryptic truths, guiding seekers once each month.

A symbolist painting of the revolting man seen through Nietzsche's philosophy guiding us to embrace destruction and renewal, transcending conventional morality for self-realization and creative expression in the face of modern uncertainties.

A painting of Irminsul, standing as a monumental axis mundi, bridges the earthly and divine, embodying the timeless connection between humanity and the cosmos.

An abstract illustration of man among the stars and in the microscosm. Man is a microcosm, or a little world, because he is an extract from all the stars and planets of the whole firmament, from the earth and the elements; and so he is their quintessence.

Illustration of a Chaos magick evocation seen in the Pandaemonaeon, which unlocks the creativity and transformation within blurred realities.

A painting of Mithras, the ancient god of light and oaths, central to the Roman mystery cult, whose influence may have reached into Germanic religious practices and the esoteric world of runic magic.

An oil painting of Cernunnos, the Horned God of the woods, symbolizes nature's fertility, life-death cycles, and the mystical unity of the seen and unseen.