
Little Bread Brother is the transformed younger sibling from the narrative world of BREAD WILL WALK, a reverse zombie tragicomedy set in a near-future city facing systemic food collapse.
In this universe, a synthetic emergency loaf produced by a corporate agro-biotech system is distributed to stabilize famine conditions. The bread appears to solve scarcity.
But it mutates the eater.
Anyone who consumes the loaf transforms into Walking Bread: a warm, freshly baked body shaped roughly like their former human form. The infected do not attack, bite, or spread contagion through violence. They wander slowly and try to flee.
They are edible.
This produces the central inversion of the story. The hungry living begin hunting Walking Bread as mobile food. Some people are immune and can eat them safely. Others are not. When a non-immune person eats Walking Bread, they convulse and transform into a fresh loaf themselves, becoming the next edible body.
The epidemic spreads through hunger.
Little Bread Brother represents the emotional center of this mechanism. After eating a ration loaf, a young boy transforms into bread while his older sister hides him from the starving population outside. To the world he is food. To her he remains family.
The design merges human anatomy with baked crust textures. Facial features collapse into fermentation seams and blistered oven surfaces while the body retains the posture of a confused child. The result is both grotesque and fragile, emphasizing the tragic absurdity of the reversal.
In this world the infected are harmless.
The living are dangerous.
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.


Spherical panoramic image captured using a dual fisheye lens system, showing an enclosed studio environment split into two adjacent circular projections. Each hemisphere distorts the perspective, producing curved walls, floors, and ceilings that converge toward the periphery. The left circular frame reveals a workspace with desks, shelving, and pinned artwork. Papers cover the vertical surfaces, displaying numerous character sketches, head studies, and sequential figure variations taped in grid-like arrangements. A lamp, chair, and shelving with stacked materials are visible along the left perimeter.
The right circular frame focuses on a wall densely covered with printed sheets arranged in large vertical panels. The papers depict schematic diagrams, illustrations of anthropomorphic heads, and tonal studies, filling the surface in overlapping layers. A desk surface in the foreground is covered with additional papers, books, and circular design motifs. The fisheye distortion curves straight lines, bending walls and tables into arcs.
The combined stereographic image emphasizes the density of creative material within the workspace. Hundreds of sheets form an archive-like atmosphere, blending documentation, concept development, and visual iteration. The fisheye capture method highlights spatial totality, situating the viewer inside the environment with immersive distortion.

Close-up documentation of a drawing process viewed through the circular aperture of a magnifying lamp. The lamp, positioned centrally, forms a dark circular frame with its lens magnifying the active drawing beneath. A hand in mid-motion occupies the lower portion of the composition, applying lines with a pencil to a sheet of paper resting on a wooden surface. The subject of the drawing is a detailed anthropomorphic head rendered in graphite, with complex textural folds, overlapping anatomical distortions, and layered structural elements.
The paper surface is partially obscured by the magnifier’s frame, but visible sections reveal concentric contour lines and shading gradually building depth. The artist’s sleeve, made of ribbed fabric in gray tones, extends from the left edge, further emphasizing the human scale of the working process. The lighting is concentrated beneath the magnifier, producing a bright illuminated disc contrasting with the surrounding darker workspace.
The composition merges functional documentation of process with strong formal geometry: circular lamp, round aperture, magnified illuminated field, and radial arrangement of pencil marks. This creates a layered relationship between drawing, optical enlargement, and bodily gesture, situating the act of hand rendering as both technical and performative.

Side-by-side composite image juxtaposing two separate but thematically linked visuals. On the left, a character design drawing depicts a humanoid figure with a bread-like head and simplified body structure. Metal bolts, screws, and spacers have been physically attached through the paper, aligning with joint positions of the character’s arms, legs, torso, and head. These hardware elements simulate points of articulation, transforming the flat illustration into a hybrid plan for mechanical armature or puppet construction. The right half of the composite shows a bakery tray filled with powdered sugar-coated donuts labeled Chocolat à la neige – Beigne classique. The arrangement of rounded confections within a wire basket directly parallels the repetitive bread-based forms that inform the character’s head structure in the drawing.
The juxtaposition emphasizes the continuity between food textures and mechanical design, bridging edible references and engineering schematics. The bolts and fasteners extend the illustrated figure into a technical prototype stage, while the donuts reinforce the conceptual link between pastry geometry and anthropomorphic design.

Ink line drawing of vertically oriented mechanical structure resembling robotic limb or exoskeletal frame with extensive biomechanical surface articulation. Form is composed of interconnected modular segments, each rendered with dense technical detailing including rivets, circular housings, tubes, and overlapping plates. Lower section widens into flared base resembling foot or stabilizing platform, with curved ridges and radial contouring. Above, stacked cylindrical joints articulate into midsection composed of multiple gears, pistons, and coiled tubing.
Upper segment transitions into heavily biomorphic structure resembling hybrid of cranial cavity and mechanical housing. Surfaces are covered in interlaced wires, conduits, and organic-like ridges, merging industrial engineering with anatomical suggestion. At left, large rectangular apparatus extends outward, equipped with multiple subcomponents, tubing, and valve-like protrusions, possibly functioning as mounted tool or weapon. Lines are executed with variable density—fine etching for surface texture, heavier contouring for outer form boundaries.
Overall silhouette is asymmetrical yet balanced, leaning slightly forward with cantilevered mass offset by heavy base. Visual style integrates influences from technical drafting, biomechanical illustration, and concept design for mechanical creatures. Composition emphasizes complexity, with little empty space inside form—every section filled with articulated mechanical detail.

Color illustration centered on surreal composite portrait framed within oval silhouette. Foreground features humanoid face tinted green, with exaggeratedly smooth skin and distorted proportions. Eyes are misaligned, nose appears compressed, and mouth positioned low with pursed lips, producing uncanny asymmetry. Hair is rendered in stylized waves, light brown in tone, recalling mid-20th century portrait conventions. Neck area shows collared garment with bow or knot detail.
Framing the head are two oversized red hands, palms inward and fingers curved, appearing to grip or enclose the face. Anatomical detailing of hands is exaggerated with long angular fingers, exaggerated knuckles, and glossy surface shading. Above, shadowed black silhouette of abstract form crowns composition, resembling hybrid between insect carapace and negative-space mask, adding ominous contextual weight.
Background is plain white, emphasizing contrast between saturated reds, eerie green tones, and dark silhouette. At bottom of composition, text printed in serif font reads: “dop·pel·gäng·er or dop·pel·gang·er (dôp′əl-gāng′ər, gĕng′-) n.” reproducing dictionary-style phonetic breakdown and definition heading, contextualizing image in relation to concept of double or uncanny counterpart.
Stylistic treatment blends graphic design with painterly rendering, merging elements of surreal portraiture, poster illustration, and conceptual typography. Overall visual effect emphasizes tension between duplicated identity, distorted human features, and enclosing external force, situating image within symbolic register of uncanny alterity.

Illustrated rendering of rectangular brass wall plaque conceived as institutional signage artifact, surface treated with darkened patina to simulate aged oxidation while raised serif lettering remains polished to golden luster, creating high contrast between background and text, composition enclosed within fine metallic border that reinforces geometric framing, inscription organized into hierarchical layers beginning with compact uppercase phrase “THE CHULDALE” placed at top margin, followed by oversized central “CITY” establishing focal emphasis, then aligned phrase “AND DISTRICT” set in slightly smaller capitals directly below, extended by wide inscription “SAVINGS BANK” occupying primary horizontal span, and completed with final compact legend “ESTABLISHED IN 1646” centered at lower edge to suggest longevity and institutional permanence, all letterforms designed in classical serif style with consistent relief depth and proportional spacing, lighting modeled to accentuate reflective quality of polished text while recessed fields retain matte shadow, stone wall texture behind providing contextual anchoring, lower portion intersected by ornamental curved metallic structure implying architectural setting, overall concept synthesizing historical gravitas, civic authority, and narrative world-building to support portrayal of fictional financial institution within speculative environment.

Digital rendering depicting biomechanical hybrid subject composed of human anatomical musculature and aviation turbine engine, shown in three-quarter profile against neutral gray background. Cranial region replaced entirely by front-facing jet engine nacelle with concentric intake ring, radial fan blades, and external housing, seamlessly grafted into biological tissue where face would normally be. Engine’s metallic texture contrasts with organic striated muscle fibers extending across neck, jaw, and scalp, fibers depicted with anatomical precision, each bundle rendered to show insertion points and directional pull.
External ear remains intact on right side, protruding naturally from head, providing scale and anchoring biological reference. Musculature across shoulders, throat, and chest is exposed, omitting skin layer to reveal detailed myological structures in reddish-pink tones. Mechanical integration includes visible conduits, pipes, and structural braces entering cranial cavity, merging seamlessly with muscular and skeletal anchor points, creating impression of fully functional bioengineered interface.
Lighting originates from upper left, highlighting polished metallic fan surfaces while casting diffuse glow across exposed muscles, accentuating texture contrast. Background remains monochromatic with subtle gradient, emphasizing subject silhouette and turbine geometry. Image situates subject as symbolic biomechanical entity, merging human physiology with industrial aerospace machinery, conceptually exploring themes of hybridization, mechanized identity, and engineered anatomy.

Full-page digital screenshot of beige-background website associated with The Mill visual identity, header displaying illustrated crossed mill tools logo above bold serif “MILL” title and navigation bar including links to features, shop, contact, events, social, and acknowledgements. Central portion highlights embedded Giphy profile for Alex Boya, framed in dark interface, showing user portrait at top left along with account statistics including followers, views, and linked social media. Display grid beneath contains animated GIF previews and static images ranging from experimental animation stills to sculptural bread heads, mechanical hybrids, and surreal portraiture. Larger preview tiles emphasize specific works including altered human faces, technical props, and concept collages, contextualizing Giphy-hosted moving-image archive within site presentation.
Lower half of webpage transitions to curated image grid set against beige field, comprising multiple rows of thumbnail artworks, each square containing illustrations, drawings, or digital renderings. Works display recurring motifs such as anatomical-bread hybrids, turbine-headed figures, mechanized environments, and intricate inked textures. Arrangement is tightly structured in consistent grid with minimal spacing, creating catalog-like visual index of creative output.
Overall design juxtaposes embedded social media archive with in-house curated collection, emphasizing breadth of visual experimentation across media. Layout communicates integration of external digital platforms with thematic branding under The Mill identity, situating artist’s production simultaneously in public-facing GIF culture and controlled curated archive.