The Art: Visual Legacy of the Khamsa

From ancient temple carvings to haute couture - explore how the Khamsa has inspired artists for three millennia

The Khamsa is not merely a religious or superstitious symbol—it is one of the most artistically versatile motifs in human history. Across 3,000 years, craftspeople have reimagined the hand in countless forms: carved into stone temples, painted on ceramic tiles, embroidered into textiles, cast in silver and gold, and now laser-etched into minimalist jewelry.

What makes the Khamsa so enduringly beautiful? Its perfect symmetry, its instantly recognizable silhouette, and its ability to absorb regional artistic styles while remaining unmistakably itself. Whether rendered in the geometric precision of Islamic art or the flowing lines of Art Nouveau, the Khamsa hand remains a powerful presence.

This page celebrates the visual evolution of the Khamsa across architecture, jewelry, textiles, ceramics, and modern design.

Architecture: The Hand in Stone and Tile

The Khamsa's architectural legacy spans from Punic temple reliefs to Moorish palaces to contemporary Israeli buildings. In architecture, the hand serves both decorative and apotropaic functions—beautifying spaces while protecting inhabitants from the evil eye.

Khamsa motifs in tilework at the Alhambra palace, Granada
Granada, Spain • 14th Century

The Alhambra Palace

The Nasrid Palace in Granada contains numerous Khamsa motifs in its tile work and stucco decoration. The hand appears in geometric Islamic patterns, often integrated with arabesque designs and Quranic calligraphy. These representations are subtle—embedded within the overall design rather than standing alone.

Brass hand-shaped door knocker in a Fez doorway, Morocco
Fez, Morocco • 18th-19th Century

Moroccan Door Knockers

Perhaps the most iconic architectural use of the Khamsa is the hand-shaped door knocker found throughout Morocco's medinas. Cast in bronze or brass, these functional amulets serve a dual purpose: summoning inhabitants and warding off evil from entering the home. The tradition dates back centuries.

Stone hand carving from a Carthaginian temple to Tanit, Tunisia
Carthage, Tunisia • 3rd Century BCE

Tanit Temple Reliefs

Excavations at Carthaginian temples dedicated to Tanit reveal hand symbols carved into stone. These proto-Khamsas show an open palm with five fingers, often accompanied by the triangular "Sign of Tanit." These are among the earliest representations of the protective hand motif.

Modern Hamsa motif in Jerusalem architectural metalwork, Israel
Jerusalem, Israel • Modern

Contemporary Israeli Architecture

Modern Israeli buildings, particularly in Jerusalem's Old City, incorporate Hamsa motifs in decorative metalwork, gate designs, and facade ornaments. Artists blend ancient symbolism with contemporary minimalist aesthetics, creating a bridge between tradition and modernity.

Roman-era mosaic with hand symbol from the Bardo Museum, Tunis
Tunis, Tunisia • 19th Century

Bardo Museum Mosaics

Roman-era mosaics in Tunisia occasionally feature hand symbols, demonstrating continuity from Punic to Roman to Islamic traditions. These mosaics show hands with eyes in the center—a design element that would become standard in later Islamic and Jewish interpretations.

Blue-painted door with a Khamsa hand motif in Essaouira, Morocco
Essaouira, Morocco • 18th Century

Blue-Painted Walls

The coastal town of Essaouira is famous for its blue-painted doors and walls adorned with hand symbols. The blue color (traditionally associated with warding off the evil eye) combined with the Khamsa creates a double layer of protection. This aesthetic has become synonymous with Moroccan design.

Jewelry: Wearing Protection

Khamsa jewelry represents the most personal relationship with the symbol. Worn close to the body—as necklaces, bracelets, rings, and earrings—these pieces serve as constant reminders of protection, faith, and cultural identity. Jewelry styles range from ornate traditional Berber silver to minimalist contemporary gold.

Traditional Berber silver Khamsa pendant with filigree and inlay
Morocco • Traditional

Berber Silver Khamsa

Traditional Berber silversmiths create large, ornate Khamsa pendants with intricate filigree work, coral or amber inlays, and dangling elements. These pieces are often family heirlooms, passed down through generations. The silver is hand-hammered and oxidized for an antique finish.

Contemporary Israeli gold Hamsa pendant
Israel • Modern

Israeli Gold Hamsa

Contemporary Israeli jewelry designers create sleek, minimalist Hamsa pieces in 14k or 18k gold. These designs emphasize clean lines and modern aesthetics while honoring the symbol's protective meaning. Often studded with diamonds or sapphires (representing the "eye"), they're popular in both religious and secular contexts.

Ottoman-style Khamsa pendant with blue Nazar bead from Turkey
Turkey • Traditional

Ottoman-Style Khamsa

Turkish jewelers combine the Khamsa with the Nazar (blue evil eye bead), creating hybrid protective amulets. These pieces often feature intricate Ottoman motifs like tulips, crescents, and stars. Enamelwork in vibrant blues, reds, and greens is characteristic of the Turkish style.

Traditional Tunisian gold Khoumissa pendant
Tunisia • Traditional

Tunisian Gold Khoumissa

In Tunisia, the Khamsa is called "Khoumissa." Traditional Tunisian gold jewelry features the hand combined with fish (another protective symbol), crescents, and coral beads. These pieces are elaborate and heavy, designed for special occasions like weddings.

Contemporary Western Hamsa fashion-jewellery design
New York, USA • Contemporary

Western Fashion Jewelry

From the 2000s onward, Western fashion-jewellery designers - from large luxury houses to smaller boutique studios - have created high-end Hamsa pieces aimed at a spiritual-but-not-religious clientele. These often feature precious stones and mixed metals, emphasising style and silhouette over the symbol's traditional meaning.

Yemenite Jewish silver Hamsa with filigree and granulation
Yemen • Traditional

Yemenite Jewish Silver

Yemenite Jewish silversmiths created distinctive Hamsa pieces characterized by their delicate filigree work and architectural quality. These pieces often incorporate Hebrew letters, Stars of David, and granulation techniques. Yemenite Jewish jewelry is considered among the finest in the Jewish silverworking tradition.

Textiles: Embroidered Protection

The Khamsa appears woven into rugs, embroidered onto garments, and printed on fabrics across the Mediterranean. Textile Khamsas serve both decorative and protective functions—adorning homes while safeguarding against negative energy.

Berber rug woven with Khamsa motifs from Morocco
Morocco • Traditional

Berber Rugs

Moroccan Berber women weave Khamsa symbols into tribal rugs using ancient geometric patterns. These rugs, particularly from the Beni Ourain and Azilal tribes, feature abstract hand motifs in natural wool colors (cream, brown, black). Each rug is unique, reflecting the weaver's personal style and protective intentions.

Palestinian tatreez embroidery with Khamsa motif
Palestine • Traditional

Palestinian Embroidery (Tatreez)

Palestinian women embroider Khamsa motifs onto traditional thobes (dresses) using cross-stitch technique. The hand appears alongside cypresses, birds, and geometric patterns in vibrant reds, greens, and oranges. These garments are cultural treasures, with regional variations indicating the wearer's village of origin.

Turkish kilim rug with stylised hand symbol
Turkey • Traditional

Turkish Kilim Rugs

Turkish kilim (flat-woven) rugs incorporate stylized hand symbols called "Elibelinde" (hands on hips), which are protective fertility symbols. While not identical to the Khamsa, they represent the same tradition of using hand imagery for protection. These rugs feature bold geometric designs in reds, blues, and golds.

Damascus brocade fabric with metallic Khamsa pattern
Syria • Pre-2011

Damascus Brocade

Syrian artisans created luxurious brocade fabrics with metallic Khamsa patterns woven into silk. These textiles were used for ceremonial garments, cushions, and wall hangings. The Syrian civil war has tragically disrupted this centuries-old craft tradition.

Tunisian embroidered wall hanging with Khamsa motif
Tunisia • Traditional

Tunisian Wall Hangings

Tunisian textile artists create decorative wall hangings featuring the Khamsa surrounded by Islamic calligraphy and floral motifs. These pieces, often made for newlyweds, combine embroidery, appliqué, and sequin work on velvet or cotton backgrounds.

Contemporary Hamsa textile design on home decor
Global • Contemporary

Modern Home Textiles

Today the Khamsa appears screen-printed on everything from throw pillows to beach towels. Mainstream lifestyle retailers and many independent sellers mass-produce Hamsa textiles aimed at Western bohemian aesthetics. The pieces are commercially successful but typically lack the regional context, materials, and craft technique of traditional examples.

Ceramics & Metalwork: Functional Art

Khamsa motifs adorn functional objects—plates, bowls, lamps, mirrors, and decorative vessels. These objects bring protection into daily life, transforming mundane activities like dining or grooming into spiritually charged rituals.

Cobalt-blue hand-painted Fez pottery with Khamsa motif
Fez, Morocco • Traditional

Fez Blue Pottery

Fez is renowned for its cobalt blue pottery featuring hand-painted Khamsa designs. Artisans use traditional techniques dating to the 9th century, creating plates, tajines, and decorative pieces with intricate geometric patterns surrounding the hand symbol. The distinctive Fez blue is created from natural cobalt oxide.

Israeli Hanukkah menorah incorporating a Hamsa design
Israel • Modern

Hanukkah Menorahs

Israeli artists create Hanukkah menorahs (nine-branched candelabras) incorporating Hamsa designs. These Judaica pieces combine religious function with protective symbolism, often featuring the hand as the central shamash (helper candle) holder. Materials range from brass to glass to ceramic.

Moroccan brass hand-shaped framed mirror
Morocco • Traditional

Hand-Shaped Mirrors

Moroccan metalworkers create mirrors framed in hand-shaped brass or copper. These serve a dual symbolic purpose: the mirror reflects the evil eye back to its sender, while the Khamsa hand provides an additional layer of protection. The metalwork is often inlaid with colored glass or bone.

Hand-painted Tunisian Nabeul ceramic plate with Khamsa motif
Tunisia • Traditional

Nabeul Ceramics

The Tunisian town of Nabeul specializes in hand-painted ceramics with Khamsa motifs. Plates, bowls, and serving dishes feature the hand surrounded by jasmine flowers (Tunisia's national flower), fish, and Arabic calligraphy. The style is characterized by bright yellows, greens, and blues.

Turkish mosaic lamp with Khamsa design in coloured glass
Turkey • Traditional

Turkish Mosaic Lamps

Turkish artisans create stunning mosaic lamps with Khamsa designs using colored glass fragments. When illuminated, these lamps cast intricate patterns of light and shadow. The tradition combines Byzantine mosaic techniques with Ottoman aesthetics.

Contemporary metal wall sculpture in the form of a Khamsa
Global • Contemporary

Metal Wall Art

Contemporary metal artists create large-scale Khamsa wall sculptures from copper, steel, or aluminum. These pieces, popular in modern interior design, range from minimalist outlines to elaborate 3D constructions with intricate cut-out patterns.

Fashion & Pop Culture: The Khamsa Goes Mainstream

In the twenty-first century the Khamsa entered global fashion consciousness. As pop musicians and luxury collections drew on Kabbalistic and Mediterranean motifs, the symbol moved beyond its cultural origins to become a more general style statement.

Khamsa motif in haute-couture collection runway design
Paris/Milan • 2000s-Present

High Fashion Runways

Several haute-couture houses have incorporated Khamsa motifs into their collections, often blending the symbol with other Mediterranean and North African references. The pieces have prompted ongoing conversation about the line between cultural appropriation and appreciation.

Henna body-art design featuring a Khamsa motif
Global • 2010s

Henna & Body Art

The Khamsa is one of the most popular designs in henna (mehndi) body art. Brides in North Africa, the Middle East, and South Asia have the hand symbol applied to their palms or foreheads for weddings. The temporary nature of henna makes it perfect for incorporating intricate Khamsa patterns.

Khamsa motif on contemporary tech accessories
Global • 2010s-Present

Tech Accessories

The Khamsa now appears on phone cases, laptop stickers, PopSockets, and AirPods cases. This digital-age adaptation shows the symbol's continued relevance for younger generations seeking protection—now from digital negativity and online evil eyes.

Street-art mural featuring an oversized Khamsa hand
Global • Contemporary

Street Art & Murals

Urban artists worldwide incorporate oversized Khamsa symbols into street art and murals. These works often carry political messages about Middle Eastern peace, refugee crises, or interfaith harmony. Notable examples appear in Berlin, Tel Aviv, Beirut, and New York.

Contemporary Hamsa pendant in fine-jewellery style
Los Angeles • 2000s

Celebrity Jewelry

A wave of celebrity interest in Kabbalah and Middle Eastern spiritual traditions during the 2000s helped bring Hamsa necklaces into mainstream Western fashion. The visibility, in turn, drove a substantial commercial boom in Hamsa jewellery and the spread of the symbol well beyond its original communities.

Khamsa motif on yoga and wellness products
Global • Contemporary

Yoga & Wellness

The Khamsa appears on yoga mats, meditation cushions, and wellness retreat logos. While disconnected from its original religious contexts, these uses reflect the symbol's universal appeal as a representation of mindfulness, protection, and spiritual seeking.

The Artistic Future of the Khamsa

What will the next chapter of Khamsa art look like? As technology advances, we're seeing:

Yet despite technological innovation, traditional craftspeople continue their work—Moroccan silversmiths hammering amulets, Fez potters hand-painting tiles, Yemenite jewelers perfecting filigree. The future of Khamsa art lies in this balance: honoring ancient techniques while embracing new mediums.

The hand that protected ancient Carthaginians, medieval Sephardic Jews, Ottoman sultans, and North African villagers now protects Silicon Valley tech workers and Tokyo fashion enthusiasts. Its form evolves, but its essence remains: a beautiful reminder that we are all vulnerable, and we all seek protection.

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