The layout displays a mosaic of animation frames, paired with the header “PINK FLOYD ANIMATION CONTEST THANK YOU”, situating the acknowledgment within a celebratory, retrospective communication. At the center of the screen, Boya’s profile image and channel statistics stand out clearly: the name Alex Boya, follower and view count, and his established media channel presence (notably already surpassing billions of GIF views across platforms) are made visible under the official Pink Floyd branding. This positioning effectively integrates his creative identity into the band’s digital front page, a rare and high-profile instance of convergence between independent animation practice and one of the most influential music groups in cultural history.
Boya’s signature Walking Bread universe, with its distinctive bread-headed figures and surreal, morphing anatomical-cyborg hybrids, stands in dialogue with Pink Floyd’s own tradition of experimental visuals. The juxtaposition of his work alongside submissions from a global network of animators further demonstrates the resonance of his creative language in contexts far beyond local or national exposure. Not only does this validate his participation, but it also solidifies his creative practice as intersecting with legacy-driven cultural narratives that continue to inspire audiences worldwide.
The video metadata, visible in the lower section of the screenshot, confirms the official release: published by Pink Floyd on YouTube, it accumulated 42,000 views within 10 days at the time of capture. The inclusion of the Pink Floyd 50th Anniversary logo anchors the contest to a larger commemorative campaign, situating Boya’s recognition within a key historical celebration of the band’s five-decade legacy.
For archival continuity, this moment establishes Alex Boya’s name and animated work not only as recognized but as visibly inscribed on the band’s own media architecture, creating a bridge between experimental, independently-driven animation and the enduring cultural weight of global rock history. The screenshot preserves irrefutable proof of this high-visibility acknowledgment, functioning both as documentation of recognition and as validation of Boya’s expanding reach across platforms that connect mass audiences, legacy art, and contemporary animation practices.
Composite arrangement consisting of six rectangular visual segments organized in a grid configuration. Upper left quadrant displays a three-dimensional computer-generated model within an interface resembling CAD or 3D animation software. The object consists of red polygonal primitives arranged into industrial architectural forms, including cylindrical exhaust stacks, cubic blocks, and interconnected piping. Interface toolbar, timeline, and viewport navigation elements frame the rendering, confirming procedural generation through mesh construction and parametric alignment. Adjacent upper right panel features an overlaid drawing with dense linework and layered transparencies resembling architectural schematics. Multiple contour lines, hatching, and cross-sections create volumetric impressions of machinery, staircases, and structural frameworks. Perspective orientation suggests exploded axonometric style, with faint sepia and green overlays simulating archival blueprint textures.
The image shows a sports stadium setting, specifically a football field, with a large rectangular banner spread across the grass. The banner occupies a significant portion of the field and depicts an enlarged bread surface rendered with anthropomorphic features, including circular eyes, a rounded nose, and simplified contours suggesting a face. The banner is oriented horizontally relative to the field and is held at its edges by a perimeter of uniformed participants forming a rectangular boundary. Each person is spaced evenly, gripping the edges to keep the surface taut, ensuring the printed image remains visible without major folds or creases. The banner’s background coloration is darker with gradients transitioning outward, contrasting with the lighter-toned bread face in the center.
Rectangular identification card composed of layered polymer substrate with printed typographic fields, security motifs, and integrated serial elements. The left upper quadrant contains a photographic frame where the conventional biometric portrait is substituted by a bread-shaped anthropomorphic head, exhibiting a golden-brown baked surface with stylized apertures suggesting ocular cavities, a protruding nose form, and an open mouth. Below the portrait frame, a collared shirt in light coloration is visible, maintaining standardized attire consistency. The central portion of the document includes multilingual inscriptions such as “CARTA DI IDENTITÀ / IDENTITY CARD” arranged in horizontal registers, overlaid on background fields consisting of guilloché line patterns, color gradients, and microtext security printing. A holographic overlay and emblematic insignia occupy the right section, combined with a designated fingerprint placeholder. The lower region of the card displays numeric sequences, serial numbers, and alphanumeric strings aligned in gridlike order, partially obscured by overprinting layers. A metallic paperclip secures the document in the upper corner, producing localized compression marks. The full arrangement juxtaposes the standardized geometry and typographic order of a government-issued identity medium with the incongruous replacement of the identification photograph by an object of alimentary morphology stylized to mimic a human head form.
Image of a passport identity document page modified with surreal interventions and symbolic overlays. The central layout follows the structural conventions of an international passport: bordered page with typographic fields, printed emblems, background security patterns, holographic motifs, and overprinted stamps. Sections contain legible text fragments in multiple languages, including Dutch and English, with references to “Paspoort Koninkrijk der Nederlanden” and “Identity Card.” Security features such as microprint, guilloche patterns, and watermark-like imagery are integrated into the page.
The image shows a digital screenshot from the Anibar International Animation Festival’s online platform highlighting the official film selection. The upper section features the festival banner with the slogan “SMASH PATRIARCHY” written in bold white letters across a purple-to-pink gradient background. Two stylized human figures, one on each side, extend their arms toward each other in a gesture of solidarity or connection. Text in both English and Albanian identifies the festival dates “15–21 JULY” in Peja, Kosovo.