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.