
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.

The image is a multi-panel composite bringing together exterior architecture, interior convention documentation, and schematic exhibition mapping. In the upper left quadrant, a digitally manipulated photograph shows a modern convention center clad in multi-colored glass panels, surmounted by an enormous bread loaf replacing the rooftop structure. The bread mass, golden brown and textured, looms absurdly over the urban setting, transforming the building into a hybrid of civic architecture and food parody.
To the right, schematic diagrams depict floor plans of exhibition layouts. The top diagram focuses on a zoomed-in section of booths with labeled rectangles marked by numbers and vendor names such as “Tuhi” and “Holo,” while the lower schematic provides a comprehensive plan of an entire convention floor, mapping aisles, exits, and zones in dense architectural coding.
The lower right quadrant features a wide-angle interior photograph of a convention hall filled with rows of tables, vendor booths, and a dense crowd of attendees. Structural lighting rigs hang from the ceiling, and the aisles are populated with people browsing, shopping, or engaging with exhibitors. This documentation situates the bread-architecture exterior and floor plans within a real-world scale of human participation and mass cultural gathering.
Together, the collage juxtaposes fantasy and practicality: a surreal bread-topped civic landmark with the logistical realities of booth mapping and the lived density of convention culture. It emphasizes the interplay between imagination, spectacle, and infrastructure that underpins cultural events, while humorously reframing bread as both architectural symbol and absurd cultural signifier.

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.