Skip to product information
1 of 1

Tarot Fellow

Pan Satyr Statue 9.5 Inch Greek God of Wild Nature

Regular price
$70.95
Regular price
$70.95
Sale price
$70.95
  • Hurry, only 2 items left in stock!
Details
Short description:

Pan Satyr Statue 9.5″ — a nine-and-a-half inch statue of Pan, the Greek god of wilderness, shepherds, music, and the untamed natural world. Half man, half goat, the Satyr Pan embodies primal nature energy, creative ecstasy, and the sacred wildness beneath civilization. Invoke Pan for earth magic, nature rituals, creative inspiration, and the celebration of Beltane and other nature festivals on your altar.

Description:

Quick Specs

  • Type: Resin deity statue
  • Size/Quantity: 9.5 inches tall
  • Best for: Nature altars, Beltane, earth magic, creativity and fertility rituals

Pan: Greek God of the Wild and Primal Nature Energy

Pan is one of the oldest Greek nature deities, predating the Olympian pantheon in some accounts. Half man and half goat, he is the god of shepherds, mountain pastures, rustic music, and the untamed wild. His name is connected etymologically to the Greek word for "all," and he is sometimes interpreted as the spirit animating all of nature rather than a deity with a single domain. Pan's domain is the places where civilization ends: the forest edge, the mountain ridge, the unpastured hillside at dusk.

In Wiccan and neopagan practice, Pan frequently appears as the archetypal Horned God, a consort to the Great Goddess and the male principle of wild, generative nature energy. He is invoked at Beltane for fertility and creative abundance, in sacral chakra work for physical vitality and creative expression, and in nature magic where the practitioner wants to connect with the raw power of the natural world rather than its gentle, domesticated aspects. His association with the pan flute makes him relevant in music, poetry, and artistic practice as well.

Altar Placement and Ritual Applications

At 9.5 inches, this Pan figure commands attention on an altar without overwhelming it. Practitioners typically place him in the south quarter to align with the fire element's creative and transformative energy, or in the center of a nature-magic working space. Offerings suited to Pan include pine cones, acorns, wild honey, red wine, fresh herbs, and earthy stones like tiger's eye or carnelian. Green and orange candles both work well with his energy spectrum, from lush growth to burning creative fire.

Pan is also an effective focal point for sacral chakra meditations focused on creativity, sensual energy, and the expression of vitality through physical action. For seasonal practice, he belongs naturally at Beltane and at the summer solstice when solar and earth energy are at their height. Browse my creativity and ideas crystal selection for stones that support Pan-aligned work in the creative and generative sphere.

How to Use a Pan Satyr Statue

Three approaches for working with a Pan statue in pagan ritual and nature magic.

  1. Position for Earth Magic

    Position Pan on the south quarter of your altar to align with the element of fire and primal creative energy. Pair with red or orange candles, mugwort, or a small drum if you work with rhythm-based ritual practice and earth invocation.

  2. Beltane or Creativity Ritual

    At Beltane or on a Friday ruled by Venus, light a green candle before Pan's statue and state your creative intention aloud. Pan governs music, wild nature, and fertility, amplifying creative projects, artistic work, and abundance rituals.

  3. Sacral Chakra Work

    For sacral chakra work, place the statue at the altar center and meditate on the color orange. Pan's energy connects to creative fire and physical vitality. Pair with carnelian or tiger's eye to support what you want to bring into form.

The Tarot Fellow Standard

I stock this Pan figure because the Horned God deserves a piece with genuine presence, and at 9.5 inches this one delivers. The goat-man form is rendered with enough mythological specificity to read as Pan rather than a generic satyr, which matters for practitioners who are building devoted altars rather than decorative displays. For statuary companions in the Greek or nature-deity tradition, browse my full statue collection to see what pairs well beside him.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is Pan in Greek mythology?

Pan is the ancient Greek god of wilderness, shepherds, and flocks, depicted as half man and half goat. He rules forests, mountains, and rustic music, and is associated with primal nature energy, creative ecstasy, and fertility rites.

What is Pan invoked for in pagan practice?

Pan is invoked for creative inspiration, fertility, earth magic, and Beltane ceremonies. He is also called upon for artistic endeavors and abundance. In some Wiccan traditions he serves as the horned consort of the earth goddess in seasonal rites.

What are Pan's elemental and chakra associations?

Pan is associated with the elements of earth and fire, the sacral chakra, and green, orange, and brown color correspondences. His botanical connections include oak, ivy, and pine, all wild plants that thrive outside cultivated garden boundaries.

What offerings suit a Pan altar?

A Pan altar typically includes earthy offerings: pine cones, acorns, soil, wild herbs, honey, or red wine. Green and orange candles, drums, and carnelian or tiger's eye crystals align with his energy of vitality, creativity, and wild nature.

Nine and a half inch Pan Satyr statue of Greek god of wild nature music and ecstasy for pagan altar decor and earth magic devotion