Post by lunarisse on May 31, 2022 0:05:18 GMT
Source: forums.eveonline.com/t/rumors-gossip-tabloids/130182/142
Melisma Ramijozana
Nov '19
Recent visitors to the Tebu Amkhiman in Tanoo may have noticed a smattering of symbolic art drawn crudely on the walls along some of the corridors.
Easily dismissible as “graffiti”, these symbols are in fact derived from Sebiestor symbology. Most of them have appeared in the commercial district, in particular across from the retail space rented by Corovid Industries, but a few have also shown up in the residential district—all confined to the Heideran Deck—and near The Ocean Blue Coffee House.
The symbols are hand-painted with brown or dark red heavy paint, although the paint is quite easy to remove and seems to have been designed specifically for use in stations.
Those who are familiar with Sebiestor symbolism and how it ties into spirituality can spot a common theme among the paintings, which is love. They seem to depict a profound happiness and fulfillment, with the ones in the residential district additionally describing wishes for a future with someone (who is also described in glowing “terms”) and celebrating triumphs over the past.
The ones near the coffee house refer to an “adopted Circle”, perhaps better translated as a chosen family, and appears to refer to the staff of the coffee house, the alliance that runs the Tebu, and/or both. They are all drawn with a free, careening hand, suggesting that the artist was in a state of ecstasy.
Security footage—and potentially first-hand witnessing—would show most of these paintings being drawn at midday, with a handful of the residential ones occurring in the very early morning hours. The artist is quite clearly Melisma Ramijozana. The young woman skips around the corridors and gesticulates in sweeping motions as she paints, and sometimes performs tribe and clan dances before, during, or after her work. She can also be heard vocalizing or throat-singing. For the midday ones, she sometimes appears to be under the influence of mind-altering substances. Each occurrence lasts only a minute or two, though, before she spirits herself away.
Oftentimes her next visit to her latest artwork is incidental and she seems mildly shocked to see the symbols drawn by her hand, and walks off very quickly.
Nov '19
Recent visitors to the Tebu Amkhiman in Tanoo may have noticed a smattering of symbolic art drawn crudely on the walls along some of the corridors.
Easily dismissible as “graffiti”, these symbols are in fact derived from Sebiestor symbology. Most of them have appeared in the commercial district, in particular across from the retail space rented by Corovid Industries, but a few have also shown up in the residential district—all confined to the Heideran Deck—and near The Ocean Blue Coffee House.
The symbols are hand-painted with brown or dark red heavy paint, although the paint is quite easy to remove and seems to have been designed specifically for use in stations.
Those who are familiar with Sebiestor symbolism and how it ties into spirituality can spot a common theme among the paintings, which is love. They seem to depict a profound happiness and fulfillment, with the ones in the residential district additionally describing wishes for a future with someone (who is also described in glowing “terms”) and celebrating triumphs over the past.
The ones near the coffee house refer to an “adopted Circle”, perhaps better translated as a chosen family, and appears to refer to the staff of the coffee house, the alliance that runs the Tebu, and/or both. They are all drawn with a free, careening hand, suggesting that the artist was in a state of ecstasy.
Security footage—and potentially first-hand witnessing—would show most of these paintings being drawn at midday, with a handful of the residential ones occurring in the very early morning hours. The artist is quite clearly Melisma Ramijozana. The young woman skips around the corridors and gesticulates in sweeping motions as she paints, and sometimes performs tribe and clan dances before, during, or after her work. She can also be heard vocalizing or throat-singing. For the midday ones, she sometimes appears to be under the influence of mind-altering substances. Each occurrence lasts only a minute or two, though, before she spirits herself away.
Oftentimes her next visit to her latest artwork is incidental and she seems mildly shocked to see the symbols drawn by her hand, and walks off very quickly.