

The image is a digital collage combining urban architecture with food imagery. The central subject is a modern high-rise building featuring angular glass and steel facades. The lower left portion of the structure is clad in a bold red exterior, while the central and right sections exhibit grid-like white and gray facades with vertical striping. On the upper section of the building, the letters NFB (National Film Board) are visible, marking institutional identity.Superimposed on top of the building is a large bread loaf, seamlessly integrated as though it were the architectural crown. The bread’s rounded, golden-brown surface contrasts sharply with the rectilinear rigidity of the building below. Its texture is detailed with baked crust, flour dusting, and natural irregularities, rendering it both realistic and humorous as a structural replacement for an architectural roof.
Surrounding the central composite are additional urban buildings rendered in grayscale, reinforcing the modern cityscape context. The montage humorously transforms functional architecture into a surreal hybrid, merging food and building typologies while simultaneously parodying institutional monumentalism.
This photograph captures a rainy outdoor setting in front of the National Film Board of Canada (Office national du film du Canada) building. The large beige-brick façade prominently displays the institution’s bilingual signage at the top right, marking its identity in both French and English. Workers on elevated lift platforms are in the process of adjusting or installing the signage: one lift positions a technician at the letterforms, while another lift and utility truck remain stationed nearby, with equipment deployed for the operation.
This image captures a carefully mounted black-and-white photographic print positioned on a professional animation lightbox, secured with archival tape along the edges, and aligned precisely within peg registration guides to ensure stability and accuracy during compositing or filming. The print itself depicts a striking architectural or infrastructural subject, specifically a long, curving bridge or elevated passageway extending into the distance, its railings producing a rhythmic perspective that converges towards the horizon. The surface grain and tonal qualities of the photo suggest silver gelatin or halftone printing processes, evoking mid-20th-century visual documentation aesthetics. Surrounding the print is the circular black housing of the lightbox system, complete with etched measurement rulers and steel peg bars, which are essential tools in traditional animation workflows for frame-to-frame alignment, optical registration, and camera-ready preparation. The wooden tabletop surface beneath further situates the object in a working studio environment, possibly within the National Film Board of Canada’s heritage animation facilities, where hybrid workflows bridge analog techniques with digital restoration and archival scanning practices. The juxtaposition of infrastructural imagery with animation equipment highlights how architectural forms, industrial engineering, and cinematic apparatus interconnect in experimental media-making practices. The composition underscores the meticulous balance between mechanical precision and artistic manipulation required in frame-based production. This piece may function as both a documentation artifact and a working component in a larger research pipeline, linking photographic evidence, cinematic heritage, and practical animation craft. It demonstrates the layered process through which material culture is translated into animated image sequences, situating technical accuracy alongside conceptual exploration.
This image documents an early handmade graphic concept associated with the ongoing Walking Bread project. The composition features the words Walking bread rendered in black hand-painted text across a patch of textured yellow pigment, which has been brushed directly onto a coarse canvas or textile surface. The uneven strokes of both paint and lettering highlight the material immediacy of the process, recalling traditional poster-making, DIY stencil art, and painterly improvisation before the adoption of digital typography workflows. The yellow background, applied with visible brush textures, creates a high-contrast ground that emphasizes the irregular spacing, angled baseline, and organic letterforms of the black text. The word “Walking” appears slightly elevated and more curved, while “bread” sits larger and bolder, anchoring the composition. This physical prototype likely represents a stage in the iterative development of branding, title treatment, or visual identity experiments tied to Walking Bread as an animation film and broader conceptual project. The rawness of the design conveys immediacy, experimentation, and a tactile materiality absent from purely digital methods. The juxtaposition of bright color against neutral fabric foregrounds a sense of handmade authenticity, situating the work in the lineage of craft-based visual culture, activist poster aesthetics, and workshop prototyping. As an artifact, it embodies both archival and developmental significance, linking material studio practice to the evolution of an internationally circulating creative project.