The figure represented in high relief on the stele, probably placed on the wall surface of a temple, shows the characteristic movement of the body called tribhanga, defined by the protruding posture of the right side, by the inclination of the bust and head, slightly curved to the left and by the arm right arched over the head. The position of the arm raised above the head, with the hand gripping a tree branch, is the strictly canonical one of the shalabhanjika, the one who breaks a branch of the shala tree. The wide and open face has elongated and slightly protruding eyes, highlighted by the high arch of the arched eyebrows. At the foot of the figure there are two small attendants. The stylistic features of the figure are those of the plastic tradition of the medieval Indian period in its central-western variant.