In the pantheon of ancient Egypt, Seshat held a unique and quietly powerful role. Goddess of writing, knowledge, archiving, and sacred architecture, she was the one who knew how to measure time and space. Often depicted wearing a leopard-skin robe—a symbol of authority and wisdom—and crowned with a seven-pointed star, Seshat was the divine scribe, recording the deeds of pharaohs. But she was also the organizing mind behind the built world. In temple foundation rituals, it was Seshat who “stretched the cord,” marking the sacred boundaries of a new structure and drawing harmony between earth and sky.

In this work, RAME13 revives the memory of Seshat and offers it back to us in a contemporary key, through her unmistakable visual language—rich in symbols, feminine figures, and fluid lines that tell stories even in the most unexpected spaces. The logistics environment—often seen as rigid, technical, purely functional—becomes, through the artist’s eyes, a place to be rewritten, remeasured. Just like Seshat did with the land of the pharaohs.

Here, the feminine form is not merely decorative—it is a creative force. RAME13 invites us to recognize the transformative power of art: an art that doesn’t dominate space, but weaves into it—softening it, questioning it, enriching it. Just as Seshat once defined the sacred proportions of ancient buildings, the artist today redraws the contours of our everyday world, opening glimpses of beauty—even among concrete and warehouses.

Because every place, when truly listened to, can become a landscape of the soul.