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Screen capture photograph of a digital interface showing a media player or sharing platform. On the right side of the screen, two interactive options are listed vertically with icons: “Download” and “Add to Collection.” Beneath these options is a section of the post interface containing a visible numerical engagement metric. An eye-shaped icon precedes the number 1,130,616 Views, indicating the total view count for the media item displayed.

Text overlays at the top left corner consist of tagged organization handles: @unesco, @meta, @gipharts. These appear in bold white boxes with black text, suggesting a social media story or repost overlay format.

At the bottom of the screen are interactive hashtags enclosed in pill-shaped icons, including #on and #global, indicating topical indexing for broader discoverability. Additional partially visible text such as “transformation” appears in the lower-left portion of the image, suggesting thematic categorization of the media content.

The blurred background image on the left appears to show an exterior stone-paved surface with walls, though it is only partially visible. The focus of the screenshot emphasizes interface elements, tagging, and numerical engagement rather than the content itself.

This capture reflects social media dissemination of creative media connected with international cultural and digital platforms, situating the content within a context of large-scale online visibility and institutional association.
Workspace setup featuring integration of animation production and thematic objects prepared for a project associated with UNESCO. The central monitor displays professional video editing software. In the preview panel, a hand-drawn humanoid character is visible, holding a green-colored object. Below, a structured timeline reveals stacked tracks containing synchronized video and audio segments, with waveforms and markers indicating post-production adjustments. Thumbnail panels on the side provide quick access to related animation clips, reinforcing sequential editing workflow.

Directly beneath the monitor, physical objects connect the digital editing activity to broader symbolic and material references. A small sculpted head model with simplified features rests on the desk, functioning as a reference for puppet design or character prototype. Two bread rolls are placed beside the model, representing the recurring bread motif integrated across the project’s thematic framework. A visible electronic circuit board on the left side suggests parallel experimentation with technical components, possibly related to animatronics, scanning, or motion input. A set of over-ear headphones sits at the right edge, available for critical monitoring of synchronized audio elements during the editing process.

The overall arrangement demonstrates hybrid methodology where digital editing, analog sculptural models, and material props coexist as active tools in the animation pipeline. The use of bread objects and prototype figures anchors the symbolic framework of the Bread Will Walk project while situating it within a professional editing environment. The reference to UNESCO connects the production to an international cultural and institutional framework, highlighting the role of experimental media practices in heritage, art, and global communication contexts.
Commisioned for #UNESCO's Rewired Global Declaration Connectivity for Education https://en.unesco.org/.../Rewired%20Global%20Declaration...
The image presents a grid arrangement of six panels showing progressive variations of a single artwork. Each panel depicts a spherical structure resembling a dome or globe set against a textured background wall. The dome surface is covered with intricate linework, cross-hatching, and layered patterns, producing dense visual complexity. Extending downward from the base of the dome are elongated vertical elements resembling tendrils, wires, or hanging structures. To the right of the dome in each frame, a rectangular console or panel with mechanical or digital detailing is consistently present.

The six panels are arranged in two vertical columns of three rows each. The upper left, middle left, and lower left panels show darker, more saturated variations with heavy use of brown, red, and black tones, emphasizing depth through shading. The right column panels display lighter iterations with reduced tonal density, incorporating paler greys, whites, and faintly visible structural gridlines. In the lower right iteration, the dome is rendered with the least opacity, showing the underlying framework of arcs and intersecting lines more transparently, suggesting early construction or wireframe stage.

All six iterations maintain compositional consistency: dome centered, tendrils extending vertically downward, and rectangular device positioned adjacent to the right side. Variations emphasize progressive refinement of transparency, shading, and surface pattern, documenting a work-in-progress sequence.

Text placed centrally across the lower middle portion reads: “Some work-in-progress for Unesco.” The typeface is sans serif, black lettering on white rectangular background, digitally overlaid across the artwork.

The visual field overall shows continuity between analog qualities of drawing—dense hatching, textural buildup—and digital refinements involving transparency and grid frameworks. The series functions as sequential documentation of iterative stages in the design process, combining conceptual draft and technical development toward a final commission for UNESCO.
 
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