Kryptos
Kryptos is an outdoor sculpture created by American artist Jim Sanborn and installed at the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) headquarters in Langley, Virginia, dedicated on November 3, 1990.[1] The artwork, whose name derives from the Greek word for "hidden," incorporates elements symbolizing intelligence gathering, including a large copper screen displaying a Vigenère tableau, curved copper plates inscribed with 869 characters of ciphertext divided into four sections (K1 through K4), granite slabs featuring a compass rose, and a pool with flowing water.[1][2] Sanborn, inspired by themes of cryptography and espionage, used classical and modern encryption methods for the messages, drawing from historical ciphers and incorporating materials sourced from the United States, such as petrified wood and red granite.[1][3]
The sculpture's encrypted texts have captivated cryptographers, intelligence analysts, and puzzle enthusiasts since its unveiling, with the first three passages (K1, K2, and K3) solved relatively soon after installation—K1 and K2 by CIA analyst David Stein in 1999 using Vigenère and transposition ciphers, and K3 by an NSA team including senior cryptanalyst Ken Miller in 1992 using a columnar transposition cipher—revealing poetic references to historical artifacts and locations like the Berlin Wall.[4][5] The fourth and final section, K4, a 97-character ciphertext beginning with "OBKR," remained unsolved for 35 years, frustrating experts despite numerous clues provided by Sanborn over the decades, including hints about layered ciphers and references to specific words like "NORTHEAST" and "EAST."[6][7]
In October 2025, the plaintext of K4 was accidentally uncovered by novelist Jarett Kobek and writer Richard Byrne, who discovered misplaced documents in the Smithsonian Institution's archives containing the original text, which Sanborn had stored there for safekeeping; the message references the Berlin World Clock and themes of time and history, confirmed by the artist himself.[8][7] This revelation, following Sanborn's announcement of an auction for the official solution to fund his other projects, marked the complete decryption of Kryptos, transforming it from an enduring enigma into a fully interpreted symbol of the interplay between art, code, and intelligence.[6][8] The sculpture continues to stand as a prominent feature of the CIA grounds, accessible only to employees and invited guests, underscoring its role in both aesthetic and intellectual provocation.[1]
Creation and Installation
Commission and Design Process
In 1988, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) initiated a commission for a sculpture as part of the landscaping for the entrance to its new headquarters building in Langley, Virginia, allocating $250,000 from the project's budget under federal art-in-architecture guidelines administered by the General Services Administration.[1][9] A joint panel comprising members from the National Endowment for the Arts and the CIA evaluated submissions from various artists and, in November 1988, selected the proposal from Virginia-based sculptor Jim Sanborn for a work titled Kryptos, meaning "hidden" in Greek.[1] Sanborn's concept emphasized themes of intelligence gathering and the historical evolution of cryptography, aligning with the agency's mission.[1]
Sanborn collaborated closely with Edward Scheidt, a retiring CIA cryptographer and former chairman of the agency's Cryptographic Center within the Office of Training, to develop the encryption techniques integrated into the sculpture.[10] Their partnership, which began around 1988 and lasted approximately four months, involved Scheidt instructing Sanborn on classical and modern cipher methods to ensure the codes were challenging yet grounded in authentic cryptographic principles.[10] Sanborn also consulted a professional fiction writer to craft the plaintext messages, drawing from literary sources to embed layered meanings related to discovery and concealment.[1]
The design process drew inspiration from ancient cryptographic practices, evoking the secretive transmission of information across history, as well as Sanborn's fascination with intelligence operations and pivotal moments of revelation, such as archaeologist Howard Carter's 1922 discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb, which influenced elements of the encoded text.[1][10] Concept development spanned 1989 to 1990, during which Sanborn refined the integration of natural materials and encoded elements to symbolize the flow of hidden knowledge.[1] Fabrication occurred in 1990 at Sanborn's studio, leading to the sculpture's dedication on November 3, 1990, in the CIA's courtyard plaza.[1][9]
Installation at CIA Headquarters
The Kryptos sculpture was installed on the grounds of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) headquarters in Langley, Virginia, specifically in the courtyard between the Original Headquarters Building and the New Headquarters Building.[1] The primary component, a large S-shaped copper screen, occupies the northwest corner of the courtyard, while additional elements, including granite slabs and a reflective pool, are positioned near the entrance to the New Headquarters Building.[1] This placement integrates the artwork into the agency's landscape, creating a semi-circular garden area that enhances the contemplative atmosphere around the site.[11]
The dedication ceremony took place on November 3, 1990, attended by CIA Director William H. Webster and other agency officials. During the event, artist Jim Sanborn presented Webster with two sealed envelopes containing the solutions to the sculpture's encrypted messages, ensuring the codes remained confidential within the agency. Sanborn publicly acknowledged the presence of encrypted elements in the sculpture but withheld details on the methods or content, heightening intrigue among attendees.[1]
Upon installation, Kryptos elicited immediate curiosity and puzzlement from CIA employees, who recognized the encoded letters and inscriptions as a challenge tied to the agency's cryptographic heritage.[1] Early reactions highlighted the artwork's enigmatic appeal, with staff members beginning informal efforts to decipher its messages shortly after the unveiling.[4]
The sculpture's landscape elements, such as a calm reflective pool situated between layered granite slabs and surrounded by tall grasses, along with additional granite pieces inscribed in Morse code, were designed to blend seamlessly with the headquarters' grounds.[1] These features, including a compass rose etched into one slab, contribute to an overall installation that evokes themes of hidden knowledge and natural flow, complementing the copper screen's visual prominence.[1]
Maintenance of Kryptos is handled by the CIA, with the sculpture accessible primarily to agency employees and authorized visitors.[1]
Physical Description
Sculpture Components
The Kryptos sculpture's central feature is a large, S-shaped copper screen, standing 12 feet high and spanning 20 feet in length, formed by two curved copper plates positioned side by side. This screen is perforated with exactly 1,735 uppercase alphabetic letters cut out by hand using jigsaws, creating an intricate pattern visible from both sides. The copper material was intentionally aged to develop a verdigris patina, giving the structure a weathered, greenish appearance that blends with its outdoor setting.[1][12][13]
The main elements of the sculpture are divided between the entrance to the CIA's New Headquarters Building and the northwest courtyard. At the entrance, copper sheets are embedded between slabs of polished red granite, inscribed with three International Morse code messages containing contemplative phrases. In the courtyard, surrounding the copper screen are supporting elements integrated into the landscape, including a shallow pool with continuously flowing water that evokes the dissemination of information. Flanking the pool are layered polished red granite slabs incorporating quartz and petrified wood accents. Additional components at the entrance include a large engraved compass rose on one granite slab, oriented to point toward a nearby lodestone—a naturally magnetic stone embedded in the installation to symbolize navigational themes. The right-hand side of the copper screen features a keyed Vigenère encryption tableau, a grid-like arrangement of letters subtly integrated into the overall design.[1][3][14][15]
The entire installation occupies the northwest corner of the CIA's New Headquarters Building courtyard, with the copper screen facing northwest toward the main entrance, creating a visual pathway that draws visitors into the space. Materials were selected for their American origins, including copper and domestically quarried granite, emphasizing a connection to the site's environmental context. This layout integrates seamlessly with the surrounding architecture.[1][16]
Symbolic Elements
The Kryptos sculpture incorporates various non-encrypted symbolic features that underscore themes of perception, direction, and the elusive nature of information in intelligence operations. At the entrance to the CIA's New Headquarters Building, copper sheets are embedded between slabs of polished red granite, bearing inscriptions in International Morse code that translate to contemplative phrases. One such message reads: "BETWEEN SUBTLE SHADING AND THE ABSENCE OF LIGHT LIES THE NUANCE OF IQLUSION," featuring an intentional misspelling of "illusion" as "iqlusion" to evoke the subtleties and deceptions inherent in espionage.[1][17] These Morse code elements symbolize the encoded communications that permeate intelligence work, inviting viewers to decode not just letters but deeper layers of meaning.
A striking symbol is the lodestone—a naturally magnetized piece of iron ore—placed near an engraved compass rose on one of the granite slabs. This arrangement alludes to Earth's magnetic fields and navigational tools, representing the guidance, disorientation, and hidden paths that define covert operations. The compass rose, pointing toward the lodestone, further emphasizes themes of orientation amid secrecy, as the magnetic pull mirrors the invisible forces directing intelligence efforts.[1][13]
In the adjacent courtyard, a shallow pool fed by concealed underground pipes creates a gentle, meandering flow of water over layered stone and wood elements, symbolizing the passage of time, gradual erosion, and the unpredictable dissemination of knowledge. The water's origin and destination remain obscured, paralleling how intelligence flows covertly and erodes barriers to revelation over time. This dynamic feature ties into the sculpture's use of natural materials like petrified wood and quartz, which evoke permanence alongside transformation.[1]
Collectively, these symbols integrate art, natural processes, and cryptographic motifs to reflect the essence of CIA activities, blending visibility with concealment. Artist Jim Sanborn designed Kryptos as a multifaceted, "layered" installation intended to provoke ongoing reflection beyond surface-level puzzles, stating, "They will be able to read what I wrote, but what I wrote is a mystery itself." This approach encourages contemplation of intelligence as an interplay of subtle cues and enduring enigmas.[1][18]
Encrypted Messages
Structure of the Four Passages
The Kryptos sculpture's encrypted messages are divided into four distinct passages, labeled K1 through K4, inscribed on the curved copper screen facing the courtyard at CIA headquarters. K1, K2, and K3 occupy the left curve of the S-shaped structure, while K4 is positioned in the right curve, creating a visual and thematic progression that emphasizes the puzzle's layered complexity.[5]
These passages consist of uppercase letters only, with no punctuation, numbers, or lowercase characters, and include four question marks integrated into the text as spacers or potential clues. The total ciphertext across all four passages comprises 869 characters (865 letters plus the four question marks). Specifically, K1 contains 63 characters, K2 has 373 characters (including 3 question marks), K3 includes 336 characters (including 1 question mark), and K4 totals 97 characters. Deliberate misspellings and apparent errors, such as "IQLUSION" in the decrypted K1, are intentional elements designed to challenge solvers and add layers to the riddle.[5][3]
Passages K1 and K2 employ variants of the Vigenère cipher, a polyalphabetic substitution method using a repeating keyword to shift letters in the plaintext. For these, Sanborn utilized a custom tableau derived from a "KRYPTOS"-keyed alphabet (repeating the keyword to fill the standard 26-letter grid, removing duplicates), paired with unique keywords: "PALIMPSEST" for K1 and "ABSCISSA" for K2. K3 uses a double columnar transposition cipher, rearranging the letters without substitution. In contrast, K4 employs a more complex method, potentially involving advanced polyalphabetic techniques or masking, distinct from the methods used in the earlier passages.[5][19][20]
Artist Jim Sanborn confirmed in 1999, following independent solutions to K1–K3 by computer scientist Jim Gillogly, that these passages use the described ciphers but emphasized that K4 demands a fundamentally different decryption strategy, heightening its enduring mystery. The overall design integrates these encryptions with the sculpture's physical elements, such as the nearby granite slabs and compass rose, to evoke themes of hidden intelligence without directly embedding solutions in the text.[20][21]
Full Text of the Encryptions
The encrypted messages on the Kryptos sculpture are divided into four distinct passages carved into the left face of the main copper screen, with each passage presented in a block of raised letters following a serpentine path through the Vigenère tableau elements on the right face. The following transcriptions provide the verbatim ciphertexts for each passage, preserving the line breaks and approximate positioning as observed on the sculpture for accuracy. These texts consist solely of uppercase letters A-Z, with no punctuation or numbers in the ciphertext itself. For readability in this format, long passages are presented in compacted form; full line-by-line rubbings are available in official sources.[1]
Passage 1 (K1)
This top passage is carved in seven lines, totaling 63 characters, positioned in the upper left of the screen.
EMUFPHZLRFA
XYUSDJKZLD
KRNSHGNFIVJ
YQTQUXQBQVY
UVLLTREVJYQ
TMKYRDMFD
EMUFPHZLRFA
XYUSDJKZLD
KRNSHGNFIVJ
YQTQUXQBQVY
UVLLTREVJYQ
TMKYRDMFD
Compacted: EMUFPHZLRFAXYUSDJKZLDKRNSHGNFIVJYQTQUXQBQVYUVLLTREVJYQTMKYRDMFD[3]
Passage 2 (K2)
This passage is carved in multiple lines below K1, totaling 373 characters (including 3 question marks), in the upper middle left of the screen.
Compacted: VFPJUDEEHZWETZYVGWHKKQETGFQJNCEGGWHKK?DQMCPFQZDQMMIAGPFXHQRLGTIMVMZJANQLVKQEDAGDVFRPJUNGEUNAQZGZLECGYUXUENJTBJLBQCRTBJDFHRRYIZETKZEMVDUFKSJHKFWHKUWQLSZFTIHHDDDUVH?DWKBFUFPWNTDFIYCUQZEREEVLDKFEZMOQQJLTTUGSYQPFEUNLAVIDZFLGGTEZ?FKZBSFDQVGOUIPUFXHHDRKFFHQNTGPUAECNUVPDJMQCLQUMUNEDFQELZZVRRGKFFVOEEXBDMVPNFQXEZLGNZGLFLPMRJQYALMGNUVPDXVKPDQUMEBEDMHDAFMJGZNUPLGEWJLLAETG[1]
Passage 3 (K3)
This central passage is the largest, carved in a dense block of approximately 28 lines in a 20x17 grid-like arrangement (read in columns or rows depending on the decryption method), totaling 336 characters (including 1 question mark), occupying the main body of the left screen. The full continuous ciphertext compacted for analysis is:
ENDYAHROHNLSRHEOCPTEOIBIDYSHNAIACHTEWRUDNKGTINKVADFDXAPOKLKCNICTWTTHUHTQSEJKNHMKVWHWAXOKRUGGIIJTTIUVXRJRIKRRWMTSDDMGMDMVVRDEOIATUVNRTSEJKNHM[3]
The passage references the coordinates of the CIA headquarters in its decrypted form, but the ciphertext itself is the carved letters.[22]
Passage 4 (K4)
This bottom passage is carved in four lines, totaling 97 characters, positioned in the lower left of the screen, remaining unsolved until the 2025 revelation.
OBKR
UOXOGHULBSOLIFBBWFLRVQQPRNGKSSO
TWTQSJQSSEKZZWATJKLUDIAWINFBNYP
VTTMZFPKWGDKZXTJCDIGKUHUAUEKCAR
OBKR
UOXOGHULBSOLIFBBWFLRVQQPRNGKSSO
TWTQSJQSSEKZZWATJKLUDIAWINFBNYP
VTTMZFPKWGDKZXTJCDIGKUHUAUEKCAR
Compacted: OBKRUOXOGHULBSOLIFBBWFLRVQQPRNGKSSOTWTQSJQSSEKZZWATJKLUDIAWINFBNYPVTTMZFPKWGDKZXTJCDIGKUHUAUEKCAR[1]
The line lengths are irregular to follow the curving screen, with the text following the same serpentine path as the other passages.[3]
Solutions to Passages 1-3
Decipherment of Passage 1
The first encrypted passage of the Kryptos sculpture, designated K1, was successfully deciphered in 1998 by David Stein, a physicist employed by the CIA.[3] Stein's solution marked the initial breakthrough in unraveling the sculpture's messages, accomplished through manual analysis using paper and pencil over approximately 400 hours.[23]
Stein identified K1 as a Vigenère cipher, a polyalphabetic substitution method, by examining repeating patterns in the 63-character ciphertext that indicated a periodic key length of 10.[24] He derived the encryption tableau directly from the 867 letters carved on the right side of the sculpture, which form a keyed Vigenère square starting with the keyword "KRYPTOS" followed by the remaining alphabet (duplicates removed).[25] Using this tableau, Stein applied frequency analysis across the presumed 10 cipher alphabets, aligning common ciphertext letters like Y with frequent plaintext letters such as E, and iteratively tested potential keywords. This process revealed the repeating encryption key "PALIMPSEST," a term referring to a reused writing surface, which unlocked the message when applied to the ciphertext.[3]
The resulting plaintext is: "BETWEEN SUBTLE SHADING AND THE ABSENCE OF LIGHT LIES THE NUANCE OF IQLUSION."[3] The word "IQLUSION" is an intentional misspelling of "illusion," as confirmed by the artist, Jim Sanborn, who incorporated such errors to add layers of complexity.[4]
Sanborn verified the accuracy of Stein's decryption shortly after its internal revelation at the CIA, praising the solution during a discussion where Stein recited the plaintext.[26] This decipherment holds thematic significance, as the message evokes concepts of light, shadow, and perceptual nuance, directly alluding to the Morse code inscriptions on the sculpture's copper slabs—such as "LUCID MEMORY" and "SHADOW FORCES"—which explore related ideas of clarity and obscurity.[3]
Decipherment of Passage 2
Passage 2 of the Kryptos sculpture, known as K2, was deciphered in 1998 by CIA physicist David Stein using pencil and paper methods, with the solution independently confirmed in 1999 by computer scientist Jim Gillogly through computational analysis.[23] Like Passage 1, K2 employs a Vigenère cipher variant adapted to a custom tableau based on the keyword "KRYPTOS," but it uses a different repeating cipher key: "ABSCISSA," referring to the x-axis in coordinate systems.[3][27] This keyword choice derives from contextual elements in the sculpture's design and ties into the thematic motifs of coordinates and magnetism evident in the decrypted text.[28]
The resulting plaintext reads:
IT WAS TOTALLY INVISIBLE HOWS THAT POSSIBLE ? THEY USED THE EARTHS MAGNETIC FIELD X THE INFORMATION WAS GATHERED AND TRANSMITTED UNDERGRUUND TO AN UNKNOWN LOCATION X DOES LANGLEY KNOW ABOUT THIS ? THEY SHOULD ITS BURIED OUT THERE SOMEWHERE X WHO KNOWS THE EXACT LOCATION ? ONLY WW THIS WAS HIS LAST MESSAGE X THIRTY EIGHT DEGREES FIFTY SEVEN MINUTES SIX POINT FIVE SECONDS NORTH SEVENTY SEVEN DEGREES EIGHT MINUTES FORTY FOUR SECONDS WEST X LAYER TWO.
IT WAS TOTALLY INVISIBLE HOWS THAT POSSIBLE ? THEY USED THE EARTHS MAGNETIC FIELD X THE INFORMATION WAS GATHERED AND TRANSMITTED UNDERGRUUND TO AN UNKNOWN LOCATION X DOES LANGLEY KNOW ABOUT THIS ? THEY SHOULD ITS BURIED OUT THERE SOMEWHERE X WHO KNOWS THE EXACT LOCATION ? ONLY WW THIS WAS HIS LAST MESSAGE X THIRTY EIGHT DEGREES FIFTY SEVEN MINUTES SIX POINT FIVE SECONDS NORTH SEVENTY SEVEN DEGREES EIGHT MINUTES FORTY FOUR SECONDS WEST X LAYER TWO.
[27][29] This message evokes a narrative of covert intelligence operations involving invisible transmission via Earth's magnetic field, underground relays to an undisclosed site, and a buried secret at the CIA's Langley headquarters, referenced directly in the text.[23] The coordinates provided—38°57'6.5" N, 77°8'44" W—point to a location approximately 122 feet southeast of the sculpture itself, suggesting a layered puzzle element with "LAYER TWO" indicating further depth in the overall design.[27][29]
Notable in the plaintext are deliberate misspellings and stylistic choices, such as "UNDERGRUUND" instead of "UNDERGROUND" and "HOWS" for "HOW'S," which artist Jim Sanborn confirmed as intentional to embed additional clues or emphasize the theme of hidden, imperfect transmissions mimicking real-world intelligence artifacts.[3][26] These elements reinforce the sculpture's magnetic and subterranean motifs, aligning with Sanborn's collaboration with former CIA cryptographer Edward Scheidt to create messages that blend espionage lore with geometric and natural science references.[23]
Decipherment of Passage 3
The third passage of the Kryptos sculpture, known as K3 and comprising 336 characters, was solved in late 1992 by a team of National Security Agency (NSA) cryptanalysts including coordinator Ken Miller (a cryptanalyst), Dennis McDaniels (who solved K3), Ed Hannon (K2), and Lance Estes (K1). This achievement predated the CIA's internal solution by several years and public announcements in 1999. The team used manual methods, including pencil and paper, to crack the cipher in a matter of days.[4][30]
Unlike the Vigenère substitution ciphers employed in Passages 1 and 2, K3 utilizes a transposition cipher that rearranges the letters without substitution. The method involves a route transposition keyed to "KRYPTOS"—the primary keyword from the sculpture's engraved Vigenère tableau—but with the tableau transposed or realigned to guide the column ordering in a matrix. Specifically, the ciphertext is arranged into a grid (often described as 4 rows by 84 columns or equivalent dimensions totaling 336 positions, excluding the final question mark), with columns numbered according to the alphabetical sequence derived from "KRYPTOS" (e.g., positions sorted as K-R-Y-P-T-O-S). The plaintext is then extracted by reading along a predetermined route that reverses the encryption process, such as column by column in keyword order. This classical technique requires precise alignment of the tableau to match the 336-character length, ensuring the debris-clearing metaphor emerges coherently.[31][19][3]
The decrypted plaintext reads: "SLOWLY DESPARATLY SLOWLY THE REMAINS OF PASSAGE DEBRIS THAT ENCUMBERED THE LOWER PART OF THE DOORWAY WAS REMOVED WITH TREMBLING HANDS I MADE A TINY BREACH IN THE UPPER LEFT HAND CORNER AND THEN WIDENING THE HOLE A LITTLE I INSERTED THE CANDLE AND PEERED IN THE HOT AIR ESCAPING FROM THE CHAMBER CAUSED THE FLAME TO FLICKER BUT PRESENTLY DETAILS OF THE ROOM WITHIN EMERGED FROM THE MIST CAN YOU SEE ANYTHING DOCTOR ? YES IT IS WONDERFUL". This is a paraphrased excerpt from Howard Carter's firsthand account of breaching Tutankhamun's tomb on November 26, 1922, as detailed in his 1923 book The Tomb of Tutankh.Amen, with intentional misspellings like "DESPARATLY" (for "desperately") and minor grammatical alterations for artistic effect.[3]
Thematically, the passage symbolizes patient discovery and the unveiling of long-concealed truths, aligning with the CIA's mission of intelligence revelation and secrecy. Artist Jim Sanborn selected this archaeological narrative to evoke the thrill of emergence from obscurity, resonating with the post-Cold War era's timeliness following the Berlin Wall's fall in November 1989—just one year before the sculpture's 1990 installation—which marked a global shift toward transparency after decades of hidden divisions.[13]
Solution to Passage 4
Historical Attempts and Clues
Following the decipherment of passages K1 and K2 in 1999 by CIA physicist David Stein and computer scientist Jim Gillogly, and K3 by an NSA team led by Ken Miller (internally in 1992), professional cryptanalysts at the CIA and NSA turned their attention to the fourth passage, known as K4, but were unable to crack it despite extensive efforts.[3][13] Amateur cryptographers, including Gillogly, also attempted to apply similar techniques to K4 shortly after, but these initial post-1999 endeavors yielded no breakthroughs, leaving the 97-character ciphertext unsolved.[3]
To assist solvers, artist Jim Sanborn provided targeted clues over the years, revealing specific plaintext mappings that emphasized geographic and directional elements potentially tied to the CIA grounds. In November 2010, Sanborn disclosed that characters 64 through 69 of K4—"NYPVTT"—decrypt to "BERLIN," suggesting a reference to a location or historical intelligence context.[32] In November 2014, he offered another hint, stating that characters 70 through 74—"MZFPK"—decrypt to "CLOCK," which follows immediately after "BERLIN" in the plaintext and may allude to a timepiece or directional marker on the site.[17] Sanborn's final pre-2025 clue came in January 2020, when he revealed that characters 26 through 34 decrypt to "NORTHEAST," further highlighting compass directions as key thematic components.[33]
Numerous decryption methods were tested and ultimately failed against K4, including variants of the Vigenère cipher (used in K1 and K2), Hill ciphers involving matrix-based substitutions, and steganographic techniques intended to hide messages within the sculpture's physical or artistic elements.[13] Statistical analyses of K4's letter frequencies and digrams have demonstrated non-random patterns consistent with a polyalphabetic or masked cipher, yet these properties resist standard cryptanalytic tools due to the passage's brevity.[34]
The global cryptography community sustained interest in K4 through dedicated books, such as those chronicling unsolved ciphers, and collaborative discussions at conferences like the National Cryptologic Museum's events, where enthusiasts noted that the 97 characters are insufficient for reliable frequency analysis without additional keys or structures derived from K1-K3.[13] These efforts underscored K4's design as a deliberate challenge requiring layered decryption beyond the Vigenère and transposition methods that unlocked the earlier passages.[3]
2025 Revelation and Decryption
In October 2025, the fourth and final encrypted passage of the Kryptos sculpture, known as K4, was solved by journalists Richard Byrne and Jarett Kobek through an accidental discovery of misplaced documents in the Smithsonian Institution's archives. While researching Jim Sanborn's archived materials, the pair found taped-together paper scraps containing the original plaintext, which Sanborn had stored there for safekeeping but mistakenly included due to his ongoing cancer treatment. This breakthrough occurred amid heightened interest sparked by Sanborn's announcement of an auction for his Kryptos-related archives to fund medical expenses and disability programs.[8][7]
The discovery bypassed traditional cryptanalysis, directly revealing the coherent English text. The plaintext is a reflective passage on discovery and secrecy, though the full 97-character message has not been publicly disclosed as of November 17, 2025, due to legal threats from RR Auction prohibiting its release.[7][35]
Sculptor Jim Sanborn authenticated the solution shortly after receiving an email from the solvers on September 3, 2025, confirming its accuracy in a statement related to the ongoing auction of his archives by RR Auction, which began in October and is scheduled to conclude on November 20, 2025, with bids exceeding $200,000 as of November 12. This verification resolved decades of enigma, transforming Kryptos into a fully interpreted artwork, though the sealed archives ensure the solution's details remain private for now.[8][36]
Key Contributors and Solvers
Early and Professional Solvers
The early decipherment of Kryptos's passages was dominated by professional cryptanalysts from U.S. intelligence agencies, reflecting the sculpture's original intent as a challenging exercise for post-Cold War codebreakers. Installed in 1990 at CIA headquarters, Kryptos was designed by artist Jim Sanborn in collaboration with retired CIA cryptographer Edward Scheidt to test and sharpen the skills of agency personnel amid shifting global threats after the Cold War's end.[12][37]
In 1992, a team of National Security Agency (NSA) cryptanalysts, led by Ken Miller and including Dennis McDaniels, became the first to crack the first three passages (K1, K2, and K3) using custom software tools developed for the task.[4] The NSA effort, initiated shortly after the sculpture's unveiling, took less than a day and involved applying advanced computational cryptanalysis techniques to identify Vigenère ciphers and transposition methods in the encodings.[38] Sanborn later confirmed the accuracy of their solutions upon request from the agency.[4]
Independently, in 1998, CIA analyst David Stein solved the same three passages (K1-K3) manually during his off-hours, using pencil-and-paper methods without computer assistance, as detailed in his internal CIA report published in 1999.[23] Stein, a physicist by training, approached the puzzle as a personal challenge and shared his findings with Sanborn, who provided partial confirmation of the decryptions.[39] His work highlighted the value of traditional cryptanalytic intuition even as digital tools proliferated.
Both agencies turned to the unsolved fourth passage (K4) in the late 1990s and 2000s, mounting joint and individual efforts that included supercomputer simulations and exhaustive algorithmic testing to probe potential polyalphabetic or masking ciphers.[3] Despite these resources, K4 resisted solution, underscoring the sculpture's role in sustaining cryptanalytic rigor within the intelligence community. Sanborn occasionally offered targeted confirmations or clues to professional solvers during this period, such as verifying partial alignments with historical intelligence motifs, but withheld full details on K4 to preserve its challenge.[23]
Amateur and Collaborative Efforts
Amateur cryptographers have played a pivotal role in advancing the understanding of Kryptos since its installation, often leveraging personal computing power and communal knowledge-sharing. In 1999, computer scientist Jim Gillogly made the first public claim to deciphering passages K1 through K3 using algorithmic analysis on his home computer, predating official CIA confirmations and inspiring widespread amateur involvement.[39][40]
Online forums and dedicated resources have facilitated collaborative amateur efforts, enabling enthusiasts worldwide to pool ideas and test hypotheses. The subreddit r/KryptosK4, established in 2019, serves as a key platform for discussing potential solutions to the unsolved fourth passage, with members analyzing cipher patterns and historical clues.[41] Similarly, cryptologist Elonka Dunin's website provides an extensive archive of rubbings, transcripts, and solver histories, acting as a foundational reference for non-professional researchers.[42] Events such as the 2014 MIT Mystery Hunt have incorporated Kryptos-themed challenges, drawing hundreds of participants into puzzle-solving communities that mirror the sculpture's enigmatic style.[43]
The 2025 resolution of K4 highlighted the role of archival research in amateur approaches, as novelist Alex Wood and playwright Michael Becker accidentally uncovered the plaintext through misplaced documents in the Smithsonian Institution's archives, where Sanborn had stored it for safekeeping; the discovery was confirmed by the artist.[7][8] Open-source and custom decryption software—such as tools shared in online repositories—has allowed hobbyists to simulate Vigenère variants and transposition ciphers without institutional backing.[44]
These grassroots initiatives contrast with early professional decipherments by emphasizing accessible technology and collective problem-solving, ultimately democratizing cryptography and engaging thousands of individuals in attempts to unravel K4 over its 35-year history.[44]
Auction and Artifacts
The 2025 Auction Event
In August 2025, artist Jim Sanborn announced plans to auction the complete solution to the Kryptos sculpture's unsolved fourth panel (K4), along with related artifacts from his private archive, through RR Auction.[45] The sale is intended to transfer ownership of the original handwritten plaintext and supporting materials to the highest bidder, with proceeds potentially benefiting the CIA museum or public cryptographic institutions, relieving Sanborn of the burden of safeguarding the secret after over three decades.[10]
The auction event commenced on October 16, 2025, and is scheduled to run through November 20, 2025, under the title "Decoding History: Kryptos, Enigma, and the Rosetta Stone," featuring items such as Sanborn's original handwritten notes, decryption charts, and remnants of copper used in the sculpture's creation.[46] While primarily conducted online via RR Auction, elements of the solution were stored in the Smithsonian Institution's vaults prior to the sale, drawing additional attention to the event's historical ties.[8]
The proceedings faced significant complications when a "gigantic mistake" in Sanborn's transcription of the K4 plaintext was inadvertently revealed prematurely, allowing novelist Alex Wood and playwright Michael Becker to uncover the solution just before the auction's start.[47] This accidental disclosure, detailed in a Washington Post report on November 1, 2025, compromised the sale's exclusivity and sparked widespread media coverage, as Sanborn himself expressed disbelief at the timing.[6]
As of November 17, 2025, the auction continues to generate high interest from art collectors, cryptographers, and institutions, with current bids exceeding $244,000 and pre-sale estimates valuing the lot between $300,000 and $500,000, underscoring the enduring legacy of Kryptos as a cultural and intellectual enigma.[48] The publicity reinforces the sculpture's impact on modern cryptography, positioning the event as a pivotal moment in its transition from unsolved mystery to archived artifact.[5]
Sold Items and Public Release
In October 2025, artist Jim Sanborn began auctioning key artifacts from his private archive related to the Kryptos sculpture through RR Auction, including the original handwritten plaintext manuscript of the K4 passage, detailed encryption charts used in its creation, and preliminary sketches of the sculpture's design.[46][45] These items, collectively titled "The Complete Secrets of Kryptos," are estimated to fetch between $300,000 and $500,000, reflecting their historical and cryptographic value.[10][45]
As of November 17, 2025, the artifacts remain available for bidding, with the auction concluding on November 20, 2025. The outcome will determine their future preservation and accessibility for study, in line with Sanborn's intent for controlled release.[8]
The public dissemination of the K4 solution occurred following the accidental discovery of misplaced documents in the Smithsonian Institution's archives, with the complete decryption published in Scientific American on October 16, 2025, alongside analyses in outlets like The New York Times and WIRED.[7][8][6] This revelation, uncovered by Alex Wood and Michael Becker during preparations related to the auction, conclusively ended the 35-year mystery that had captivated cryptographers worldwide.[7][47]
Cultural Impact
The sculpture Kryptos has captured the imagination of creators across various media, serving as a symbol of cryptographic intrigue and unsolved mystery. Its enigmatic encrypted panels have inspired narratives that blend art, espionage, and puzzle-solving, often highlighting the tension between secrecy and revelation.
In literature, Kryptos features prominently in Dan Brown's 2009 novel The Lost Symbol, where it plays a central role in the plot involving hidden codes and Washington, D.C.-based conspiracies, drawing on the sculpture's real-world allure to propel the thriller's themes of cryptography and intelligence. Cryptographer Elonka Dunin, a leading expert on the sculpture, has extensively documented Kryptos in her works, including the 2023 book Codebreaking: A Practical Guide co-authored with Klaus Schmeh, which devotes sections to its historical and technical significance as a modern cipher challenge.[49]
Kryptos has appeared in television, notably in a 2007 episode of PBS's NOVA scienceNOW, which explored the sculpture's unsolved elements and the efforts of cryptanalysts to decode it, emphasizing its role in contemporary cryptography education.[50] It also influenced fictional depictions in shows like Alias, where a miniature version of the sculpture appears in the season 5 episode "S.O.S.," with a character claiming to crack its code, underscoring Kryptos's cultural status as an unbreakable enigma. Documentaries have further amplified its mystique; Smithsonian Magazine published in-depth features on the sculpture's enduring puzzle in 2020, coinciding with artist Jim Sanborn's release of additional clues, framing it as a landmark in artistic cryptography.[51]
In gaming and interactive media, Kryptos has inspired puzzle designs that echo its code-breaking essence. The CIA's official website includes online challenges in its Spy Kids section, such as a simplified "Crack the Kryptos Code" activity that teaches basic encryption to young users, promoting awareness of intelligence history.[52] Escape rooms worldwide have incorporated Kryptos-themed elements, with venues like Myst Entertainment in Bulgaria offering "The Secret of Kryptos," a room centered on decoding messages inspired by the sculpture's panels, blending physical puzzles with cryptographic lore.[53]
Following the 2025 revelation of Kryptos's final solution, media coverage surged, with The New York Times detailing the accidental discovery in Smithsonian archives and the subsequent auction of the decryption method, portraying it as a triumphant end to decades of global sleuthing.[8] Popular Mechanics highlighted the event as a milestone in cryptography, interviewing experts on how the solution—uncovered by a novelist and a playwright—resolved the sculpture's last riddle after 35 years, reigniting public fascination with code-breaking pursuits.[54]
Legacy in Cryptography and Art
Kryptos has profoundly influenced the field of cryptography by serving as a benchmark for complex puzzle design and cryptanalytic training. The sculpture's multifaceted ciphers, which blend classical techniques like Vigenère and transposition with novel elements, have inspired the creation of modern cryptographic challenges, including the annual KRYPTOS undergraduate cryptanalysis contest launched in 2011, which draws participants from across the United States and emphasizes practical codebreaking skills.[55][56] Its enduring difficulty prompted early involvement from the National Security Agency (NSA), where analysts dissected the known sections as part of internal training exercises, highlighting its role in professional cryptologic education.[4] Universities have similarly incorporated Kryptos into cryptography curricula, such as student projects at the University of California, San Diego, where it exemplifies real-world applications of historical and contemporary cryptanalysis methods.[57]
The 2025 revelation of the fourth panel's solution further underscored Kryptos's impact on emerging technologies in codebreaking, particularly AI-assisted approaches. As computational power advanced, enthusiasts and researchers leveraged machine learning models to tackle the unsolved K4, resulting in a surge of AI-generated attempts throughout early 2025, though most proved incorrect until the final decryption.[58] This episode demonstrated how Kryptos catalyzed experimentation with artificial intelligence in cryptography, bridging artistic enigma with algorithmic innovation.
In the realm of art, Kryptos pioneered the integration of cryptographic elements into public installations, influencing subsequent works by its creator, Jim Sanborn, who continued to explore themes of concealed information and natural forces in sculptures like those documenting invisible phenomena.[59] By embedding encrypted messages within a visually striking copper and stone composition on CIA grounds, the piece blurred the boundaries between aesthetic sculpture and intelligence operations, challenging viewers to confront the opacity of governmental secrecy through interactive decoding.[1]
As a cultural symbol, Kryptos embodied the allure of unsolved mysteries for over three decades, evoking Cold War-era intrigue and esoteric puzzles that captivated cryptographers and the public alike until its complete resolution in 2025.[5] Its legacy persists through ongoing institutional engagement, including scholarly examinations in journals such as Cryptologia, where analyses of its ciphers and inspired contests appear regularly.[60] The annual KRYPTOS contest continues to honor the sculpture by fostering collaborative codebreaking among students, ensuring its techniques remain a staple in educational challenges.[61] Within the CIA, Kryptos endures as a source of intellectual stimulation for employees, integrated into the agency's courtyard as a perpetual nod to cryptographic heritage.[1]