His first scribble could not begin to compare to the finest of artwork, but to Queen Tuya, it was the finest drawing she had ever seen from her adoptive son. To many, the match-stick figures of Moses, Rameses, and their parents would look rubbish, but to Tuya, it was the finest craftsmanship she had ever seen. While there was inherent perfectionism that stared from lined eyes and carefully positioned painted bodies in tomb and temple artwork, Moses' little drawing didn't care about perfection, nor about pleasing the gods—only about pleasing his parents with a child's innocent, simple, pure love.