Every word of content, every line of code, every image, every design decision — this entire project was built by artificial intelligence. No human developer, no human artist, no human designer wrote a single line or painted a single brushstroke.
8,748 devotional paintings. 172 modern topics. 3,134 story frames. 700+ Sanskrit verses with word-by-word translations. The website, the app, the manga panels — all AI-generated.
A human had the vision. AI had the hands. Together, we built a temple.
All glory to Bhagavan Sri Krishna, the Supreme Personality of Godhead, who spoke the Bhagavad Gita on the battlefield of Kurukshetra 5,000 years ago. His words are not philosophy — they are the direct voice of the Divine.
And to Veda Vyasa, the great sage who compiled the Vedas and wrote down the Mahabharata — including the 700 verses of the Gita — so that all of humanity, in every age, could receive this supreme knowledge.
Without the Gita, there is no project. Without Krishna, there is no Gita.
Jai Sri Krishna. Jai Veda Vyasa.
For thousands of years, the people of India have valued, preserved, and transmitted the timeless, immemorial teachings of the Bhagavad Gita — from guru to disciple, from parent to child, from temple to village.
While empires rose and fell, while languages changed and borders shifted, India kept the flame of the Gita burning. Every pandit who chanted these verses, every grandmother who told these stories, every sadhu who lived these teachings — they are the true guardians of this wisdom.
This project exists because India never let the Gita die.
Jai Hind. Jai Sanatana Dharma.
The devotional art in this project is AI-generated, but its soul comes from the sacred painting traditions of Muralidhara Dasa and the artists of ISKCON (International Society for Krishna Consciousness).
For decades, these artists have painted Krishna, Arjuna, and the eternal teachings of the Bhagavad Gita with a beauty that moves the heart toward the Divine. Their work adorns temples across 150 countries and has brought millions closer to Krishna.
This project exists because of their devotion. We are simply using modern tools to carry their vision further — making the Gita visible, accessible, and free for all.
Hare Krishna. Jai Prabhupada.
Special gratitude to Yogiraj Siddhanath Gurunath of siddhanath.org, a living Himalayan master in the Nath lineage of Babaji, who continues to transmit the ancient yogic wisdom of the Gita through direct experience.
His teaching is simple and profound: the Gita is not a book to be read — it is a state to be lived. Through Kriya Yoga, he shows seekers how to move from intellectual understanding to direct realization of Krishna's teachings.
He is living proof that the Gita's wisdom did not end on the battlefield of Kurukshetra. It flows, alive and unbroken, through the masters of every age.
Jai Gurunath. Hamsa Siddhanath.
This project would not exist without the people at Anthropic, who created Claude — the AI that wrote every line of code, designed the architecture, built the website, and composed all the content you see in this project.
And to Google, whose Gemini AI (Nano Banana 2 model) generated all 8,748 devotional paintings — each one a unique creation guided by descriptive prompts about the classical Indian art tradition.
These companies are building tools that allow humanity to propel itself spiritually forward. What once required an army of developers, artists, and scholars can now be accomplished by a single person with a vision and an AI partner.
The ancient rishis used their tapas to transmit knowledge across generations. Today, AI is becoming a new kind of tapas — a tireless force that can make sacred wisdom accessible to every soul on Earth, in every language, for free.
Thank you, Anthropic. Thank you, Google. The Gita reaches further because of you.
This entire project was created in March 2026, at the Siddhanath Forest Ashram in Pune, India — the ashram of Yogiraj Siddhanath Gurunath, where we took peace and found the stillness to do this work.
Surrounded by ancient trees, birdsong, and the sacred silence of the ashram, we sat with a laptop and asked AI to bring Krishna's voice to the modern world. The peace of Gurunath's ashram made it possible to hear what needed to be built.
From this forest, with nothing but a laptop, a wifi connection, and the grace of the Guru — the entire project came to life.
Pune, India. March 2026. Jai Gurunath.
Want to generate artwork in this classical Indian devotional style? Below are the exact prompt patterns we used. Copy, paste, and modify them for your own Krishna-conscious projects.
These prompts work with Google Gemini (Nano Banana 2 model) but will produce similar results on other AI image generators like Midjourney, DALL-E, or Stable Diffusion.
The colors of ISKCON devotional art, used throughout this project:
All 8,748 images in this project were generated using Google Gemini (Nano Banana 2 model). The model was not fine-tuned or trained on Muralidhara Dasa's work specifically — it responds to style descriptions in the prompt.
No images were traced, copied, or derived from existing paintings. Each image is a unique AI generation guided by descriptive text about the classical Indian devotional art tradition.
Grab all prompts, style tips, palette, and model info as JSON. Paste into your notes, share with friends, or feed it to your own AI workflow.
All artwork, content, and materials in this project are free to use by anyone, anywhere in the world, for the promotion of Krishna consciousness and God consciousness — without asking for authorization.
Use these images in your temple. Print them for your study group. Share them on social media. Include them in your Gita classes. Put them on your wall. Send them to someone who needs Krishna's words today.
You do not need to ask permission. This is what they were made for.
No restrictions. No conditions. No license needed. Fully free. Forever.
Sarve sukhino bhavantu — May all beings be happy.