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Illustration depicts upright anthropomorphic figure executed in monochromatic ink line work. Central emphasis is on cranial substitution by a Y-shaped tubular form, consisting of two cylindrical conduits branching upward and outward at symmetrical angles. Each conduit terminates in open circular aperture, drawn with interior contouring to suggest hollow depth. Surface of tubular structure is rendered with linear hatching, creating shading gradients that emphasize curvature and cylindrical volume. No facial features are present, with head region entirely replaced by this bifurcated extension.

Neck region is composed of tightly wrapped folds resembling fabric or organic constriction, transitioning downward into clothed torso. Upper garment resembles formal coat or jacket with visible collar, lapel, and front closure indicated by two buttons. Sleeves extend to shoulder level but are cropped by composition framing. Line density varies throughout: heavy outlines articulate garment contours and tubular structure periphery, while fine crosshatching adds texture within shadow zones.

Body posture remains static and frontal, with symmetrical orientation emphasizing vertical axis. Negative space surrounding figure is unembellished, reinforcing isolation of form against plain background. Ink application exhibits slight irregularities in stroke weight, indicating manual drafting technique. Minor tonal blotches are visible across substrate, suggesting paper absorption and incidental handling marks.

The composition emphasizes contrast between human attire and non-human cranial morphology, producing hybrid identity combining formal clothing conventions with industrial-organic anatomical mutation. Bifurcated tube head references both mechanical piping systems and abstract biological growth, generating interpretive ambiguity between engineered object and mutated organism.
 
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