FeedIndex
Filter: head  view all
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.
Vertical storyboard layout composed of sequential illustrated panels arranged in columns against a black grid framework. Each panel contains line drawings rendered in monochrome, presenting stages of narrative progression with recurring anthropomorphic head motifs, mechanical forms, and surreal anatomical hybrids. The arrangement spans multiple vertical strips, producing a dense storyboard scroll that organizes continuity across the entire frame.

The panels exhibit varying degrees of detail, some emphasizing skeletal frameworks and turbine-like structures, others focusing on close-up character heads drawn with minimal facial motifs (vertical stroke with bifurcated curve and circular dots for eyes). Shading and hatching techniques provide tonal depth, while many images remain schematic and diagrammatic, emphasizing process and planning.

Text overlays, including repeated “SnapmotionWWolf” watermarks, run across sections of the sequence, obscuring parts of the imagery while preserving compositional readability. At the base, the label “Turbine” identifies the project context. The left margin contains numbering and small silhouetted figure references, marking the storyboard’s indexing system.

The image functions simultaneously as narrative planning, structural archive, and visual artifact, merging drawing, diagrammatic sequencing, and cinematic pre-visualization within a single grid.
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.
Panoramic stereographic photograph combining two hemispherical fisheye perspectives of a studio interior entirely filled with paper drawings. Both halves present immersive distorted perspectives in which straight lines curve into arcs, bending walls, desks, and ceilings around circular horizons.

The left projection displays a workspace where tables and walls are densely covered with sheets of paper containing character sketches, sequential panels, and detailed graphite renderings. The ceiling appears bowed due to lens distortion, enclosing the image in a spherical envelope. In the foreground, multiple overlapping sheets show close-up character heads and anatomical variations, while the rear wall is entirely tiled with storyboard-like arrangements.

The right projection continues the spatial documentation, showing an adjacent desk with pinned wall sequences, annotated studies, and color illustrations. The fisheye effect stretches the flat paper surfaces into radial geometries, accentuating their density and distribution. Tables below the walls are piled with additional stacks of drawings, creating continuity between vertical and horizontal archival surfaces.

The overall composition merges architectural capture with visual archive, recording the total immersion of the studio space in sequential drawing processes. The fisheye lens transforms the environment into a near-spherical atlas of production, fusing documentation of physical workspace with the spatial qualities of panoramic optics.
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.
Composite image showing multiple angled views of a spiral-bound book containing printed comic layouts. Each page is divided into rectangular panels, arranged in grids that present sequential narratives with a mixture of close-up portraits, wide establishing environments, and mid-action frames. The artwork is monochrome, produced with dense hatching, stippling, and textural cross-contours that emphasize depth, volume, and atmosphere.

In the upper-left frame, a hand turns a page, revealing sequences of rounded-headed anthropomorphic characters with simplified symbolic facial motifs alongside more detailed human figures. The upper-right and lower-right frames display expanded spreads, including urban architectural environments, landscapes with mountainous backgrounds, and symbolic juxtapositions of humanoid forms against large spatial contexts. The lower-left close-up emphasizes a distorted human head in dramatic lighting, with heavy contour lines defining exaggerated expression.

The spiral binding and paper stock suggest a prototype or artist’s proof rather than mass publication. The layouts function simultaneously as a storyboard, graphic novel draft, and sequential art experiment, situating the work between planning document and narrative object.
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.
 
  Getting more posts...