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Mobile device screenshot displays professional profile webpage hosted on vp.eventival.com. Upper segment contains circular portrait photograph depicting individual with neutral facial expression, bald head, and digitally altered overlay across eyes resembling horizontal metallic slats or mechanical fins. Portrait background is uniform light grey, isolating subject without contextual environment.

Beneath image, bold typographic heading identifies name “Alex Boya.” Paragraph text below outlines career trajectory and philosophical framework. Content describes decade-long experience as creator affiliated with National Film Board, emphasizing engagement with cultural institutions as mechanisms to foster environments supporting human-computer co-development, artificial intelligence exploration, and human-computer interaction. Additional statements highlight Boya’s films as platforms for incubating experimental interactions, establishing innovative spaces where artistic media intersect with computational processes. Philosophical core articulated within text asserts that humanity remains central guiding force in technological progress, ensuring future development aligns with collective wisdom and ethical values.

Webpage design employs minimal layout, utilizing centered alignment, sans-serif typography, and monochromatic scheme. Text is arranged in justified blocks, ensuring clean margins and legibility on mobile interface. Bottom section contains interactive buttons rendered as outlined icons with corresponding functions: “More about,” envelope symbol for email contact, and circular icon for sharing or secondary action. Background remains plain white, reinforcing emphasis on textual and photographic content.

Visible browser interface elements include secure site lock icon, URL bar displaying vp.eventival.com, system status indicators for mobile signal and battery, and navigation icons for back, forward, share, and tab overview. Time reading “13:01” appears within top status bar. Scroll bar visible along right margin suggests additional content beyond current frame.

Overall presentation combines portraiture, biography, and digital interface components, functioning as institutional professional introduction situating individual’s creative practice within context of cultural, technological, and ethical discourse.
Vertical panel displays a densely arranged storyboard grid composed of multiple sequential frames distributed in two adjacent columns. Each frame consists of rectangular stills combining line drawings, photographic inserts, and colored overlays. The layout spans top to bottom with hundreds of discrete units, visually cataloging narrative progression in cinematic pre-visualization format. Frames are enclosed in thin borders with labeling sections above, consistent with storyboard template structure.

Visual content across the grid incorporates recurring spherical bread-like objects rendered in ochre or golden hues. These appear in numerous contexts: as isolated entities, within character interactions, or integrated into architectural and mechanical settings. Humanoid stick-figure sketches, stylized with minimal outlines, appear alongside these objects, performing actions such as lifting, carrying, interacting, or reacting. Several sequences depict bread spheres entering environmental backdrops, including urban skylines, interior industrial halls, broadcast media graphics, and laboratory-like spaces.

Some frames integrate mixed media where photographic textures are combined with overdrawn characters. Others feature black ink linework with shading, cross-hatching, and sparse color accents limited to bread motifs or red annotation markings. Specific frames show interface overlays, including a “Breaking News” graphic embedded mid-sequence, and a logo reading “Mill” in earlier segments. Camera angles vary from wide establishing shots to close-up detail frames, employing cinematic conventions of zoom, perspective shifts, and cross-cutting.

Lower sections of the panel contain repeated motifs of bread forms interacting with mechanical devices, gears, and conveyor systems, suggesting production or transformation processes. In several frames, characters appear to struggle or engage dynamically with enlarged bread elements. Additional panels illustrate experimental distortions, blurring, and shading gradients, creating tonal contrast with the linework.

The overall storyboard serves as a pre-visualization archive for an extended narrative involving recurring symbolic bread objects integrated with character-driven and environmental scenarios. The arrangement demonstrates continuity through successive panel order, yet also preserves variability in media application, ranging from sketch-like simplicity to mixed photographic assemblage.
Digital promotional layout consisting of a composite arrangement of text, graphics, and photographic portraits announcing an event under the title “At the service of the narrative.” The upper left quadrant contains a rectangular banner with a gradient background transitioning between pastel hues of green, purple, and light yellow, overlaid with black sans-serif typography listing the session’s name and contextual details. To the right, a vertical column of text specifies participants, event format, and institutional affiliation, presented in list form with typographic hierarchy emphasizing bolded names. Below this section are three monochrome portrait photographs aligned horizontally, each cropped at head-and-shoulder scale, showing distinct individuals in grayscale reproduction. The lower region of the composition overlays a translucent gray block containing hashtags, institutional identifiers, and participant names rendered in bold white text preceded by the hashtag or @ symbol. Identifiers reference creative institutions, specific individuals, and project titles including hubmontreal, onf, gnfb_animation_interactive, and personal accounts for Sandra Rodriguez and Sandro. The overall arrangement functions as an informational visual combining graphical gradient design, textual listing, photographic identification, and social media indexing tags for circulation within digital platforms.
Full-page digital article published on Cartoon Brew featuring an extended profile of Alex Boya and the creative worldbuilding methods behind his project The Mill. The article header presents a large illustrated bread-headed figure above the headline “Making Bread With Alex Boya: How The Canadian Artist Is Worldbuilding In Reverse With ‘The Mill.’” The introductory section summarizes Boya’s practice, highlighting his approach to building fictional universes through reverse logic and associative construction, drawing connections between The Mill, bread iconography, and other works.

Embedded throughout the article are multiple visual assets: stills, character illustrations, video embeds, and related images. Early sections reference Boya’s film Turbine with an illustrated still, followed by sketches of bread-headed humanoids rendered in line art. Later sections show photographic and drawn imagery of bread loaves, puppet constructions, and animation stills, aligning Boya’s visual universe across media. A video embed from the National Film Board (NFB) features animation work with identifiable still frames. Additional drawings depict hybrid characters composed of bread forms with anthropomorphic limbs, reinforcing thematic connections between food imagery, surreal figuration, and narrative development.

The written text alternates between commentary from the journalist and contextual information about Boya’s practice. Topics include influences, workflow, visual symbolism, Canadian cultural framing, and the blending of analogue drawing with digital techniques. Specific references are made to his experimentation with materiality, his narrative layering, and the way The Mill integrates bread symbolism into broader worldbuilding strategies. Quotes from Boya are included, contextualizing his philosophy on creation, reverse engineering of fictional contexts, and long-term project goals.

The article concludes with author credits, links to related content, and a section for community comments. Beneath the article body, the webpage layout includes sponsored promotional blocks for animation projects, recent Cartoon Brew news headlines, and external media links.
Triptych composition combining three distinct photographic segments. The left section displays an open book with printed text in black and red, accompanied by a monochrome illustration of a humanoid figure with mechanical elements integrated into the upper body and head. The page layout uses two-column formatting, with headings and subheadings highlighted in red, characteristic of academic or exhibition catalog design. The visible illustration depicts anatomical and technological fusion, contributing to the subject matter of the text.

The central section shows the facade of a curved building with vertical columns framing large red banners. The banners advertise an exhibition or cultural event, printed with white and black text alongside graphic motifs. The architectural style includes repetitive vertical elements, with banners suspended evenly across the frontage. Pedestrian-level access and signage suggest the building functions as a museum, gallery, or cultural institution.

The right section depicts the exterior of a cylindrical building segment clad in stone or concrete panels. Prominently mounted near the top is a sculpted emblem resembling an interlocked chain or geometric knot, rendered in three-dimensional relief. The weathered surface of the structure shows tonal variation from exposure, and the vantage angle looks upward toward the emblem against an overcast sky.

The combination of images highlights three interconnected domains: intellectual content in print form, public cultural presentation through banners, and architectural symbolism expressed via structural facade ornament. Together, they establish a continuum between knowledge, exhibition, and institutional identity.
 
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