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Photographic documentation of a sculptural head mounted on a vertical transparent rod attached to a black rectangular base. The head is proportionally large, rounded, and flesh-toned, occupying the majority of the composition. Its surface is smooth and polished, with hair sculpted in stylized brown waves concentrated along the top and sides, rendered with detailed texture and tonal shading to simulate natural strands.

Facial features are replaced by a minimal symbolic motif located along the vertical midline of the head. A single line descends from the hairline, splitting into a bifurcated fork-like curve at the top. Two small circular dots mark the position of eyes midway down the line. Beneath them, a tiny dot signifies the nose and a short curved stroke denotes the mouth. The ears are symmetrically sculpted and more naturalistic than the other features, protruding from both sides of the head.

The display base is stark and functional, contrasting with the organic form above. The transparent rod elevates the head, producing the impression of a museum artifact or anatomical study mounted for presentation. The background is plain white, isolating the object and eliminating contextual distractions.

The hybrid construction of naturalistic hair and ears with symbolic facial reduction situates the piece between portraiture, abstraction, and conceptual figuration. It functions simultaneously as a sculptural study, an experimental artifact, and a display-ready object merging artistic and museological aesthetics.
Photographic diptych showing a small anthropomorphic head produced in 3D-printed resin with simulated wood grain texture, placed beneath a drill press inside a workshop environment. The left frame captures a close-up of the object aligned directly under the vertically suspended drill bit. The sculptural form is smooth and rounded, featuring a minimal facial motif consisting of a single vertical line extending from the crown, bifurcated into a fork-like curve, intersected at the midline by two circular dots representing eyes. Material surface coloration and striations simulate wood grain despite the polymer origin, emphasizing the hybrid quality of digitally manufactured resin and traditional material appearance.

The right frame presents a wider view of the mechanical setup. The drill press includes a vertical column, motor housing, and chuck holding the bit, positioned above the resin head resting on the machine’s flat working table. Red pneumatic tubing coils into the frame behind the machine, and surrounding cables, safety labels, and additional equipment situate the object within a functional workshop context.

The juxtaposition highlights the intersection of additive manufacturing, traditional mechanical tooling, and symbolic figuration. The 3D-printed resin object, finished to resemble wood, operates simultaneously as a prototype, symbolic bust, and experimental artifact within a fabrication process combining digital production with industrial intervention.
Animated capture of a 3D printer in operation, showing the additive manufacturing process of a sculptural head form. The print bed is covered by a red platform, upon which the model is gradually being built layer by layer. The object exhibits a rounded cranial structure with partially formed facial contours, oriented upright during the build sequence. The nozzle assembly and filament feed move rhythmically across the print area, depositing heated polymer material that cools into successive layers.

The surrounding mechanical system includes metal rails, guide rods, and wiring conduits that control the motion of the print head in Cartesian directions. A filament spool mounted externally supplies continuous thermoplastic filament to the extruder. Dim ambient lighting emphasizes the illuminated area of the printer bed, highlighting the emerging object in contrast to darker surroundings.

The model itself appears as an anthropomorphic bust with exaggerated proportions, stylized contours, and reduced surface detail consistent with early-to-mid stages of print completion. The process documents digital design translated into physical artifact through additive deposition, situating the object at the intersection of virtual modeling, prototyping, and tangible fabrication.
Close-up view of a large sculptural structure constructed from brown paper sheets adhered over a supporting framework. The paper has been applied in overlapping layers, producing an uneven topography of wrinkles, folds, and compressed ridges. Tear openings and cavities expose interior recesses, where adhesive material and supporting strands of binding fiber remain visible. The form suggests an anthropomorphic head-like volume with protruding nasal extension and recessed eye cavities, though heavily abstracted by irregular construction.

Edges of the paper surface curl outward, revealing stratified buildup where multiple layers have been glued and pressed. Textural contrasts between taut stretched surfaces and collapsed crumpled regions highlight the sculptural process of shaping through additive layering rather than carving. The coloration remains consistent with kraft paper, giving the surface a muted earthy tone while emphasizing its fragile yet rigid qualities when bonded.

The object rests on a tripod or supporting stand, situating it within a workspace environment, where cardboard and workshop surfaces are partially visible in the background. This configuration identifies the piece as an in-progress stage of fabrication, combining raw material experimentation with emergent volumetric form.
Large papier-mâché sculptural head positioned on a black tripod stand in the center of a studio workspace. The structure is built from brown kraft paper sheets layered with adhesive, producing a surface of creases, folds, and compressed ridges. Prominent recesses at the front indicate cavities resembling nasal extension and orbital voids, though irregular layering and tearing obscure definitive contours. The surface displays tonal variations from overlapping glued paper layers, emphasizing texture and volumetric irregularity.

The immediate environment includes corrugated cardboard on the floor beneath the tripod to protect the workspace, along with a secondary table holding scattered material offcuts. Behind the form stands a vertical wall panel covered with pinned reference material, including photographic prints, character drawings, and images of earlier sculptural studies. Among them are depictions of bread-based textures, humanoid prototypes, and compositional sketches, suggesting the papier-mâché head functions within a broader iterative design workflow.

The composition situates the object as a fabrication stage within a studio documentation setting, where the papier-mâché mass operates simultaneously as sculptural prototype, textural study, and material experiment aligned with visual research pinned to the surrounding boards.
Digital screenshot of website interface structured into three-column format with dark vertical sidebar at left, central main content area, and slim navigation column at right. Site header identifies subject as “Alex Boya” with profile page dedicated to projects and activities. Top of main content column displays horizontal banner illustration in monochrome ink depicting humanoid bust with turbine-like engine head, seated behind bar counter with bottles and shelves, composition framed within architectural interior. Beneath banner, page organizes content into three stacked article previews.

First article titled “Dernier verre avec Justine” features illustration identical to header, paired with text excerpt beneath. Second article presents photographic scene from Festival 2019, crowd of people gathered at Café Court event with Espresso signage visible in background; article caption emphasizes return of Espresso program and festival continuation. Third article highlights portrait of individual in front of abstract colorful backdrop with arms crossed, title reading “Café court – Alex Boya.” Each article preview block includes thumbnail image, bold red title text, excerpt paragraph, and red link button labeled “Lire la suite.”

Right-hand column lists related navigational links and tags, including author name, article references, and thematic categories. Sidebar on left displays structured menu hierarchy: homepage link, thematic categories such as “Actualités,” “Articles,” and “Entretiens,” as well as search bar and social media icons. Footer region of page displays multiple logos of partner organizations, including Telefilm Canada, SODEC, ONF/NFB, Conseil des arts du Canada, and media partners, arranged in horizontal row against dark background.

Visual layout emphasizes clear separation of functional zones through background contrast: dark grey sidebars flanking white central content, red highlights marking interactive buttons and category labels. Typography employs sans-serif fonts for body text and headers, consistent with contemporary web design standards. Images alternate between illustrative artwork and documentary photography, creating balance between artistic representation and event documentation. Overall webpage structure functions as professional portfolio and news archive presenting Alex Boya’s artistic contributions, public events, and institutional associations within structured digital interface.
Digital composite illustration depicting anthropomorphic bust constructed from mechanical and culinary components. Head region consists of large turbine engine nacelle replacing facial structure, circular housing rendered in metallic gray with radial fan blades extending inward from central hub. Hair rendered with smooth digital brush strokes overlays upper section, styled in short layered strands. Torso and cranial interior are filled with stratified cake slices, each section differentiated by alternating layers of sponge, cream, fruit, and icing, producing cross-sectional appearance of layered desserts. Embedded confections include round pastries, cupcakes topped with frosting and fruit, dome-shaped cakes, and cylindrical desserts stacked along torso cavity.

Surrounding mechanical framework incorporates metallic tubing, hydraulic pistons, bolts, and jointed structural rods interwoven with confectionery units. Lower torso filled with cakes arranged in circular formation, surfaces decorated with strawberries, cherries, cream swirls, and sugar glaze. Shoulders reveal integration of pistons and gears aligned with dessert layers, juxtaposing industrial precision with organic culinary texture. Chromatic scheme contrasts metallic silvers and grays of turbine and mechanical parts with saturated pinks, browns, creams, and reds of desserts.

Proportions approximate natural bust silhouette, though components displace anatomical features with culinary-mechanical hybridization. Background rendered in smooth gradient pale gray, isolating subject without distraction. Visual hierarchy emphasizes turbine-head as focal point, descending into cake-laden torso supported by mechanical scaffolding. Stylistic treatment combines hyper-realistic texturing of cakes and metallic surfaces with surreal anatomical substitution, merging food illustration, technical rendering, and portrait format.
Image montage combining three photographs arranged in two horizontal tiers. Upper tier divided into two exterior architectural views of contemporary cultural venue. Left frame shows wide-angle nighttime perspective of building with sweeping metallic roof canopy perforated by numerous circular apertures, illuminated from beneath to create star-like light pattern. Entrance forecourt populated with groups of people, signage, and landscaped perimeter. Right frame depicts frontal view of same structure in daylight, emphasizing central V-shaped canyon-like cut through metallic cladding, leading inward toward glass façade and recessed main entrance. Pedestrian circulation visible with attendees moving in and out, contextualizing building as active public venue.

Lower tier displays interior auditorium environment. Perspective is from rear seating rows looking toward projection screen. Ceiling and sidewalls covered in ribbed acoustic paneling with dark matte finish, designed for optimal sound diffusion. On central screen is projected image of humanoid bust with turbine engine replacing facial features. Circular nacelle with radial fan blades occupies position of face, flanked by partial head contours and neck. Projection framed within cinematic widescreen proportions, filling lower half of composition. Ambient lighting minimal, emphasizing luminous contrast of projection image against darkened theatre.

Overall composition juxtaposes exterior architectural form and public gathering spaces with interior cinematic experience. Exterior imagery emphasizes iconic design language of perforated metallic cladding, geometric cuts, and open pedestrian corridors. Interior imagery highlights cinematic function, technical acoustic treatment, and visual content on screen. Montage underscores relationship between built environment as cultural infrastructure and its role as container for mediated audiovisual presentation.
Monochrome pen-and-ink illustration combining surreal portraiture with architectural and natural landscape elements. Composition divided between right foreground figure and left background structure. Central subject is humanoid bust with head surface replaced by circular aperture containing vertical parallel strings, resembling resonating chamber of stringed instrument such as a lyre or guitar. Aperture is darkly shaded with dense hatching, while surrounding face area is left blank, eliminating conventional facial features. Hair rendered with irregular curls and lines, framing circular void. Attire consists of bow-like cravat tied around neck, layered jacket or cloak defined by heavy cross-hatching, producing dense texture across torso region.

Left side depicts small tower-like building perched atop rocky outcrop, rendered with linear perspective and vertical emphasis. Roof structure is pitched with prominent eaves; smoke trails emerge from chimney, blown diagonally by unseen wind. Vegetation rendered as swirling, leafless branches bending with same directional force, integrating natural and architectural forms into dynamic motion. Rock base textured with curved hatch lines, contrasting with straight lines of tower walls.

Background remains lightly sketched, containing construction guidelines faintly visible, reinforcing preparatory drawing character. Overall stylistic execution emphasizes cross-hatching, parallel strokes, and tonal density variations to distinguish material surfaces: cloth, hair, stone, wood, and atmospheric smoke. Thematic juxtaposition places anthropomorphic figure with musical void head opposite solitary architectural structure, creating tension between surreal portrait and symbolic environment.
Composite bust-shaped construct integrates heterogeneous elements comprising metallic turbine assembly, confectionery products, layered pastry segments, and mechanical infrastructure arranged in anthropomorphic silhouette. Cranial region is substituted by circular jet turbine engine embedded in frontal facial zone, displaying radial fan blades enclosed in cylindrical casing with metallic sheen. Posterior head retains hair-textured covering, maintaining partial organic simulation while frontal substitution emphasizes industrial apparatus. Cervical and thoracic sections are occupied by stratified cake slices arranged horizontally, exhibiting alternating layers of sponge, cream, and icing, colored in yellow, pink, and chocolate tones. Surrounding structural matrix incorporates metallic conduits, jointed pistons, hydraulic tubing, and bolted plates, forming biomechanical scaffold supporting edible components.

Peripheral regions incorporate numerous complete pastries including frosted cupcakes topped with fruit garnishes, layered gateaux with cream decorations, round cheesecakes, cylindrical sponge rolls, and dome-like glazed sweets. These elements are positioned within cavities of the mechanical framework, alternating between visible metallic infrastructure and edible insertions. Lower torso portion presents extensive assembly of cakes and pastries arranged in sequential order, highlighting variation in form, icing coloration, and garnishing details such as strawberries, cherries, and cream swirls. Textural representation differentiates smooth metallic sheen of machinery from porous sponge interiors and glossy icing surfaces, while layered coloration accentuates contrast between industrial greys and vibrant confectionery hues.

Overall silhouette adheres to bust configuration, with shoulders delineated by rounded outlines integrating mechanical joints and layered pastry constructs. Internal cavity cross-sections reveal juxtaposition of mechanical tubing interlaced with edible layers, implying symbiotic embedding of organic consumption products within artificial skeletal infrastructure. Arrangement demonstrates deliberate fusion of aeronautical turbine engineering with culinary patisserie design, establishing contrast between propulsion technology and domestic food preparation artifacts. The juxtaposition produces hybrid artifact uniting mechanical propulsion, anthropomorphic form, and edible architecture within a singular composite visual system.
 
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