TAISHO ROMAN GRADUATION!
Sep. 22nd, 2020 02:35 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Who: Fox, Taisho, and fellow artistes
Where: Alfred Tea Room
When: Day 287, morning
If you're a member of Taisho, or perhaps someone close to Fox, you may have received an invitation via your phone. The directions on the included map lead to the Alfred Tea Room, which is...
...actually just set up like an art gallery, now? Fine works of art hang from the walls, statues and sculptures sit behind velvet cordons with nice polished plaques that tell you less about the art and more about the artist's mental state at the time the art was created. Paper doors divide the exhibits from each other, and the normal lighting has been replaced by paper lanterns with beautiful calligraphy emblazoned on the sides.
All the seating seems to be gone aside from one long table in the middle, with enough chairs for all the visitors. An adjacent serving table carries a wide variety of sushi and japanese curries, and to drink...there's coffee. And coffee. And more coffee.
There's also some scale models of the Eygptian pyramids? Wait...no, those are pyramids made of jagariko? In fact...some of the sculptures are jagariko too. Including one elaborate one at the foot of the dining table - Michaelangelo's David, in jagariko. It's all jagariko and it always has been.
On the wall at the head of the table, facing the entrance, there's a rendition of The Last Supper with Taisho as the disciples (though there's nobody where Judas normally would be), and Fox as Jesus. The rose gold plaque beneath it is large enough to read from the entrance, and says:
CONGRATULATIONS, FOX!
Where: Alfred Tea Room
When: Day 287, morning
If you're a member of Taisho, or perhaps someone close to Fox, you may have received an invitation via your phone. The directions on the included map lead to the Alfred Tea Room, which is...
...actually just set up like an art gallery, now? Fine works of art hang from the walls, statues and sculptures sit behind velvet cordons with nice polished plaques that tell you less about the art and more about the artist's mental state at the time the art was created. Paper doors divide the exhibits from each other, and the normal lighting has been replaced by paper lanterns with beautiful calligraphy emblazoned on the sides.
All the seating seems to be gone aside from one long table in the middle, with enough chairs for all the visitors. An adjacent serving table carries a wide variety of sushi and japanese curries, and to drink...there's coffee. And coffee. And more coffee.
There's also some scale models of the Eygptian pyramids? Wait...no, those are pyramids made of jagariko? In fact...some of the sculptures are jagariko too. Including one elaborate one at the foot of the dining table - Michaelangelo's David, in jagariko. It's all jagariko and it always has been.
On the wall at the head of the table, facing the entrance, there's a rendition of The Last Supper with Taisho as the disciples (though there's nobody where Judas normally would be), and Fox as Jesus. The rose gold plaque beneath it is large enough to read from the entrance, and says: