When we explore the symbols and images used to signify Babalon, we discover a collection of images which is amorphous, kaleidoscopic, serpentine. The symbols associated with Babalon are ontologically pregnant, dripping with associations: The feminine body. The septagram. The chalice. The skull. The rose. These are symbols of sex, and symbols of death. They symbolise all the fleshy conjunctions of humanness and god. Often painted as a bodacious, bare-breasted woman, Babalon remains a void. She provokes humanity while tearing human skin. Resisting the clothes with which we drape our elder gods, Babalon is naked. Her face is covered by a veil or shadow. Daughter of Binah, She is the divinity of fleshiness itself.
Art is the only imperative. As humans, we must make and consume art. This is the Path to Godhood. In Art, its consumption and its creation, we may know Her. For She is Form itself, the pressure which penetrates all Symbol and Sign. Thus: Make Art. Consume Art. Make your life a Work of Art. This is the Path to the City of Pyramids.