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Artwork presents a dense multi-layered composition integrating figurative, botanical, mechanical, and anatomical motifs. At the center is a softly rendered human-like head with closed eyes, shown in profile orientation with subtle shading and delicate contours. The facial structure appears calm, partially transparent, and interwoven with surrounding abstract forms. Superimposed across the chest region are vibrant botanical elements including orange-hued flowers and spherical fruit-like structures, serving as a focal point of color intensity within the otherwise muted palette.

Surrounding the figure, intricate linework depicts fragmented mechanical and anatomical constructs. Lower portions include schematic drawings resembling skeletal limbs, articulated joints, and structural frameworks. At the top and edges, abstract organic shapes appear dispersed, creating a sense of fluid dispersal across the composition. The layering of elements generates a semi-transparent effect, where mechanical, organic, and human features overlap within a unified field.

The color scheme consists primarily of desaturated greens, browns, and grays, punctuated by areas of vibrant orange and red in the botanical section. The overall technique combines drawing, collage, and digital compositing, producing both depth and fragmentation. The blending of representational and abstract forms suggests hybridization between natural and artificial systems, embodying themes of transformation, growth, and interconnection.

The arrangement presents an encyclopedic overlay of imagery where human, plant, and machine domains coexist, merging into a complex, semi-transparent visual ecology.

Photograph of hand-held mixed-media collage poster composed of layered printed material, handwritten elements, and colored marker interventions, arranged across vertically oriented sheet of paper with irregular placement and overlapping fragments, overall composition creating dense and playful visual field. Upper right quadrant features large circular zone filled with red marker shading containing central inscription “ALEX” in black capital letters, surrounded by cutout text blocks and slogans including “Far-Out Facts” and “Kids Did It!” Above left quadrant includes rectangular insert with French instruction “APPUYEZ” in large type above numbered text strip, adjacent to smaller clipped advertisements and beverage photograph, while vertical margin on left edge contains sequence of letters “OABSTABR” and additional symbols aligned downward.

Center of composition incorporates photographic cutout of white rabbit on orange background with accompanying caption “PSSST Have you heard?” Lower region of sheet dominated by repeated rectangular panels showing yellow-green gradient fields with overprinted purple paw-like motifs and bold slogan “Elle l’a vu” in black rectangular label, phrase repeated multiple times to establish visual rhythm. Additional cartoon-like stickers and colored illustrations with footprints, arrows, and graphic embellishments occupy surrounding spaces, while freehand marker strokes in red, green, and blue add texture across empty areas.

Poster edges show curling and folds, indicating handmade assembly from diverse sources including magazines, advertisements, packaging, and direct drawing, each layered to form scrapbook aesthetic. Background setting includes desk with scattered papers, indicating context of creative workspace. Overall composition combines fragmented commercial imagery, playful cartoon iconography, multilingual typography, and handwritten emphasis to create eclectic assemblage functioning as personalized expressive collage.
Side-by-side presentation juxtaposes two iterations of identical fantastical composition, one rendered in graphite-and-ink drawing with selective color wash, and the other realized as three-dimensional sculptural tableau photographed against neutral backdrop. Both images depict dynamic confrontation between humanoid figures and oversized anthropomorphic snail creature.

Left panel: Drawing illustrates the scene with expressive linework and selective chromatic application. Central figure is enlarged snail body rearing vertically, elongated neck extended upward, terminating in stylized head with protruding eyestalks. Large spiral shell is affixed to dorsum, shaded in brown tones. Creature wields domestic plunger in one raised arm and clenched fist in the other, emphasizing absurd combat stance. Opposing it are human figures: left figure wearing yellow garment and holding sword, shown lunging toward snail; upper-right smaller figure in magenta attire clings to snail’s extended limb while raising mallet. Background contains sketchy unfinished linework, providing faint compositional framework.

Right panel: Sculptural realization presents same battle with clay-modeled characters arranged in diorama environment. Snail creature is sculpted with turquoise-colored body and naturalistic spiral shell, positioned on rocky terrain base. Left combatant in ochre clothing wields golden sword, facing snail directly. Smaller upper figure in magenta maintains acrobatic posture on snail’s raised limb, holding wooden mallet aloft. Additional miniature snail placed in foreground establishes scale variation and environmental continuity. Lighting emphasizes surface texture of sculptural forms, with cast shadows grounding characters within simulated terrain.

Comparison highlights translation of imaginative sketch into physical dimensional model. Structural proportions, weapon placements, and gestures remain consistent across media, though rendering style differs: drawing employs contour, shading, and selective color to suggest motion and exaggeration, while sculpture emphasizes tactile materiality, volume, and three-dimensional presence. Together, the two iterations demonstrate workflow progression from conceptual illustration to physical object, unifying surreal absurdity with detailed craft execution.
Photographic documentation depicts mixed-media sculptural work consisting of two busts mounted on articulated transparent supports, both affixed to a rectangular green base. Left bust presents humanoid figure dressed in formal jacket with lapel and collared shirt, surface textured and pigmented in mottled brown and green tones to simulate aged patina. Instead of a conventional head, the figure possesses cylindrical turbine intake structure, complete with concentric fan blades radiating around central axis. A metallic conical spike projects outward from turbine core, emphasizing industrial-mechanical replacement of facial anatomy. Short brown hair is sculpted onto cranial perimeter, though entirely encircling turbine aperture, reinforcing hybrid anatomical-mechanical integration.

Right bust contrasts sharply, presenting smooth, rounded head reminiscent of simplified cartoon design. Surface is painted with pale skin tones, minimal shading, and exaggerated rounded features. Ears are circular protrusions placed symmetrically, while eyes are rendered as small dark indents. Nose protrudes hemispherically, with no mouth represented. This stylization reduces cranial form to near-symbolic caricature, diverging from hyper-detailed mechanical realism of turbine-faced figure.

Both busts are elevated and stabilized by transparent articulated armatures constructed from cylindrical joints and screws. These mechanical supports allow adjustable positioning, giving impression of floating or suspended presentation. Base is rectangular with worn green surface, suggestive of display plinth, providing stable foundation for dual assembly.

Material execution demonstrates meticulous sculptural craftsmanship. Mechanical turbine is modeled with precision, each fan blade evenly spaced, while clothing textures are layered with pigment washes to simulate fabric folds and wear. In contrast, cartoon head is smoothed with minimal textural detailing, emphasizing geometric purity. The juxtaposition generates dialogue between industrial engineering, caricature minimalism, and figurative representation.

Overall, the work embodies hybridization of realism and abstraction, contrasting technological apparatus with symbolic cartoon figuration. Presentation as dual busts on transparent mounts situates them as study specimens, allowing comparative observation of stylistic divergence within shared sculptural framework.
The drawing presents a vertically oriented sheet combining graphite rendering, gestural linework, and a central region of dense black mixed-media application. The composition is structured around interplay between free-flowing organic morphologies and rigid geometric intrusion.

Left and upper sections are dominated by heavily shaded textures resembling muscular folds, root-like structures, and fibrous entanglements. Graphite hatching and crosshatching techniques establish tonal gradations, with darker densities forming compressed, almost fleshy masses. These regions evoke visceral anatomical associations, while at the same time resembling geological layering or vegetal roots twisting around voids.

Central portion introduces stark contrast: a sharply defined black quadrilateral-like shape executed with high-density medium, possibly ink or paint, producing reflective surface different from matte graphite. This form interrupts continuity of organic lines, appearing as intrusive foreign object within otherwise naturalistic tissue-like environment. Edges of this block partially dissolve into surrounding marks, suggesting tension between impenetrable geometry and adaptive organic matter.

Right and lower sections are less densely worked, consisting of light graphite outlines and unfinished contour sketches. These gestural extensions resemble branching vascular systems, skeletal tracings, or embryonic structures, allowing negative space to dominate and counterbalance weight of darker left-side mass.

Handwritten annotation along bottom margin reads: “in our age of mortality, a cancer of the soul,” situating work within existential and metaphorical register. This textual element frames the composition as meditation on intrusion of malignancy—whether physical, psychological, or spiritual—into continuity of living matter.

The drawing thus juxtaposes material density with fragile linework, organic continuity with geometric obstruction, and visual exploration with explicit textual thematization.
Illustration presents composite cityscape and hybrid portrait rendered in ink and wash on sketchbook paper with perforated edge visible along top margin. Lower half depicts structured urban environment consisting of tightly clustered multistory buildings aligned along curving central street. Architectural facades are articulated with rectilinear grids, window arrays, and repetitive masonry patterns. Perspective lines converge toward vanishing point deep in composition, creating illusion of spatial recession and enclosed street canyon.

Dominating upper section is anthropomorphic bust emerging from background, where human shoulders and cranial base support surreal replacement head in the form of a steam locomotive. Locomotive head is detailed with cylindrical boiler, smokestack, headlamp, wheels, and mechanical piping, drawn with dense crosshatching and layered contour strokes. Locomotive body aligns horizontally, while underlying neck and shoulders support it vertically, creating juxtaposition between anatomical support and mechanical structure.

Background wash consists of light tan tonal field overlaid with transparent shading, producing aged parchment effect. Selective areas are highlighted with faint ochre and grey washes, accentuating shadows beneath buildings and volumetric curves of locomotive. Line quality throughout alternates between precise architectural drafting for cityscape and expressive gestural rendering for hybrid figure, underscoring contrast between rigid urban order and imaginative metamorphosis.

Compositionally, the locomotive-headed bust hovers above perspective grid of buildings, oversized relative to scale of city, suggesting monumental intrusion or symbolic embodiment of industrial power. Work combines architectural observation, mechanical draftsmanship, and surreal figural transformation, uniting them into hybrid allegorical scene.
Image presents a dense visual collage composed of numerous individual artworks in mixed techniques including ink drawing, watercolor, digital painting, and pencil sketching. The arrangement combines figurative studies, architectural renderings, surreal hybrids, and narrative sequences. Prominent recurring motifs include anthropomorphic heads resembling loaves of bread, oversized animal figures such as bears, mechanical and architectural hybrids, and urban ruin environments. Upper-left quadrant contains large stylized portraits with exaggerated cranial forms, adjacent to a circular clock-face head and a windmill scene rendered in painterly strokes. Central zone includes sculptural bread-like heads drawn in various perspectives, alongside a bear-like creature painted with layered brown tones and visible fur texturing. Lower sections feature ink-intensive urban landscapes, with detailed cross-hatching depicting collapsing buildings, scaffolding, and chaotic environments. Several panels include process sketches of humanoid figures, articulated with jointed limbs and simplified block-like heads. Repetition of bread-headed forms occurs across multiple scales, integrating sculptural objects with drawn renderings. Mechanical imagery is also present, including turbine structures, scaffolding towers, and architectural domes. Tonal range alternates between muted sepia, rich browns, and full-color painted segments, producing contrast between monochrome drafts and more saturated finished works. The composition situates fantastical, grotesque, and architectural elements together in a non-linear layout, resembling a storyboard or reference archive. Overlapping arrangement of sheets, without uniform spacing, reinforces the impression of a working collection of studies and finished pieces assembled for thematic continuity. The collage as a whole emphasizes iterative exploration of hybrid identities, material transformations, and surreal environments.
The screenshot shows the interface of professional animation software in use during the process of 2D animation production. The central viewport displays a hand-drawn sketch of a stylized character, consisting of a simplified face with exaggerated round eyes, a long vertical nose, a small curved mouth, and outstretched curved lines indicating arms or shoulders. The lower portion of the frame reveals photographic texture elements, suggesting mixed-media integration of hand-drawn lines with photographic collage, likely bread or organic material imagery.

The left panel includes a scene list, with the current shot labeled “Scene_animatic_001” selected. Above the viewport, playback and recording controls are visible, with options to play, pause, step through frames, and adjust preview settings. Along the bottom, a timeline presents frame numbers with visible keyframe markers, supporting sequential playback and editing. The right-hand panel contains a detailed stack of layer elements, each corresponding to different assets or drawing components within the scene. These layers are labeled sequentially with timing information and visibility toggles, allowing granular control of each visual element.

The interface as a whole combines traditional animation workflow features—frame-by-frame drawing, timeline editing, and layer management—with digital enhancements, such as asset import and mixed-media compositing. The presence of photographic textures within a sketched frame indicates experimental hybrid animation practices, merging analog hand-drawing with digital image manipulation. This screenshot captures both the technical structure of animation production software and the creative, iterative nature of visual storytelling in development.
The image is a densely layered collage combining drawings, photographs, and reference images to document the conceptual development of a bread-headed humanoid figure. At the center is a hand-drawn sketch of a figure labeled “TEST MAN,” annotated with red arrows pointing toward different design details and references. The annotations link aspects of costume, head design, and props to surrounding photographic documentation.

On the right side, multiple images depict bread-like sculptural head prototypes, photographed from various angles. One large close-up highlights the texture of a baked surface, while a sequence of smaller photographs shows iterative variations in form. On the left, photographs of mannequins, wooden apparatus, and armature elements illustrate supporting mechanisms. Additional smaller insets show textures, anatomical references, and alternative design explorations, including close-ups of heads, objects, and construction details.

The collage functions as both a mood board and a production sheet, unifying character construction, material testing, and visual inspiration. It merges hand-rendered illustration with practical material prototypes, situating the design process between concept art, sculpture, and cinematic previsualization. The layering of disparate sources emphasizes iterative experimentation, mapping the transformation of abstract design into tangible sculptural reality.
The image is a composite layout containing five distinct visual panels, juxtaposing digital 3D modeling with hand-drawn and digitally manipulated conceptual illustrations.

In the upper left, a screenshot of a 3D modeling software interface shows a red blocky structure consisting of rectangular forms, cylindrical pipes, and a large vertical tank. The interface resembles Autodesk 3ds Max or a similar modeling program, with a grid workspace and viewport tools. Adjacent to this, in the upper right, is a technical drawing rendered in fine lines and cross-hatched textures. The sketch depicts a complex industrial structure with towers, ladders, scaffolding, and pipes, blending architectural precision with imaginative elaboration.

The lower row contains three images. On the left, a collage integrates text, textures, and graphic overlays with photographic inserts, suggesting an experimental document or ID-like design. In the center, a dense hand-drawn composition features organic and mechanical hybrid forms radiating outward from a central symmetrical mass, mixing anatomical and machine aesthetics. On the right, a close-up photograph captures the blades of a large turbine or fan, emphasizing industrial engineering and mechanical scale.

Together, the collection emphasizes the interplay between digital 3D visualization, analog drawing, and experimental collage. The arrangement highlights a workflow where design concepts transition from sketch to digital modeling, and from photographic reference to speculative hybrid imagery, situating the practice at the intersection of architecture, engineering, and surrealist visual research.
 
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