
Composite sculptural object combining clay hand-formed material and 3D-printed fabrication, consisting of two vertically stacked spherical segments aligned on a central axis with the smaller unit above the larger base. The clay component exhibits smoothed surfaces with irregularities, dents, and shallow impressions characteristic of manual shaping, while the 3D printing contribution introduces layered striations and uniform curvature consistent with additive deposition processes. Both materials merge into a hybrid form that balances natural mineral substrate with digitally produced structural geometry. The figure is positioned on a translucent rectangular plate bordered by a circular black measurement frame incorporating fasteners, apertures, and alignment notches. Visible ruler markings on the frame edge indicate calibration capacity for dimensional referencing. The translucent support plate reflects overhead illumination while diffusing light across its surface, creating mild shadows under the sculptural mass. The surrounding wooden table displays grain texture, linear scratches, and tonal variation typical of workbench use, situating the object within a workshop or studio environment. Electrical and mechanical elements of the frame suggest integration into an observational or testing apparatus, where handmade clay material and digital 3D-printed structures converge to form an experimental hybrid prototype linking artisanal practice with computational manufacturing precision.

Drawing on textured paper surface representing a head study executed with layered techniques, merging traditional anatomical draftsmanship with an abstract linear facial motif. The base layer features a delicately rendered visage with downward gaze, constructed through fine line hatching and contour work. Hair is indicated with looping curls that frame the forehead and temples, executed with flowing linear marks suggesting depth and volume. Shading around the eyelids, nose, and chin is created with controlled line density, producing a sense of sculptural modeling. Superimposed over this classical structure is a minimal abstract face element consisting of a vertical stroke descending along the center of the forehead, terminating in two curved arcs that extend upward in symmetrical loops. Two small circular dots function as eyes within this imposed system, displacing the naturalistic anatomical features below.
The surface of the paper includes areas of irregular wash in earthy brown tones, applied unevenly across forehead, cheeks, and neck zones. These gestural pigment deposits obscure parts of the original drawing, generating mottled patches of opacity that contrast with the precision of line work. The wash is semi-transparent in places, allowing layered visibility of both naturalistic and schematic forms. The paper itself shows tonal aging, creases, and fibrous texture, reinforcing the tactile quality of the composition.
The work synthesizes opposing visual languages: naturalistic rendering rooted in classical figuration and reductive abstraction emphasizing symbolic geometry. The result is a hybrid visual artifact where representational anatomy, gestural mark-making, and schematic minimalism coexist on the same surface, producing an unresolved tension between depiction and erasure.