FeedIndex
Filter: opening  view all
Screenshot of digital marketplace interface (OpenSea) displaying NFT asset listing. Page header shows platform logo and login button. Title line reads “MILL CH 1 : WALKING BREAD….” followed by asset identification “002.” Ownership is attributed to account labeled “alexboya.” Below, main image panel presents black-and-white illustration rendered with ink-style linework.

Illustrated subject consists of large head filling rectangular frame, face drawn in stylized minimalist manner. Head shape is rounded with expanded forehead occupying majority of surface. Hair rendered in textured strokes runs along lateral edges, tapering at sides near ears, which are depicted as simple outward-curved forms. Central forehead marked by bifurcated linear symbol extending downward. Eyes are represented as two elongated horizontal rectangles with filled dark interiors. Nose indicated only as two closely spaced dots beneath forehead marking. Mouth positioned near lower edge of face, small circular opening with shading suggesting depth.

Facial proportions exaggerate cranial scale relative to minimal feature distribution, producing surreal anthropomorphic style. Linework alternates between heavy contouring for head outline and fine hatching for shading, especially within hair and facial borders. Background left unfilled, providing contrast with dense outlines of figure.

Marketplace interface includes icons for sharing and favoriting, with counters currently at zero. Black background emphasizes central artwork within digital listing. Context situates image as collectible digital illustration within blockchain asset framework.
Two sequential photographs document different stages of large-scale sculptural prop construction simulating bread-like humanoid head. First image shows initial understructure composed of irregular volumetric form shaped in papier-mâché or plaster-coated substrate, surfaces patched with layered paper and adhesive, producing uneven faceted planes in pale white and gray tones with scattered reddish stains. Openings for nostril cavities, oral aperture, and eye sockets are already established, though edges remain rough and unrefined. Object rests on tabletop beneath adjustable lamp, surrounded by scattered workshop materials including containers and small tools, situating artifact in fabrication environment.

Second image presents same form after advanced surface treatment. Base structure is now coated with textured paint and sculpted detailing to resemble baked bread crust. Overall coloration has transitioned into mottled golden-brown, tan, and ochre tones with darkened shading in recesses, imitating scorched flour surface. Distinctive protruding nose, wide open mouth cavity, and rounded cheeks are clearly defined, with embedded lighter crust fragments adhered across surface to simulate cracked loaf pattern. Fine brushing emphasizes porous qualities, giving illusion of crumb-like cavities breaking through outer crust. Placement in workshop remains similar, though additional reference photographs of bread textures are visible pinned nearby, alongside tools and foam padding.

Together, the two stages reveal sculptural process from rough structural armature to fully painted and textured surface simulating bread-human hybrid head, emphasizing techniques of papier-mâché layering, surface coating, paint stratification, and texture embedding. The completed object visually merges anthropomorphic facial morphology with artisanal baked bread characteristics, serving as practical effect prop within broader conceptual framework of hybridized bread-creature worldbuilding.
Drawing depicts a humanoid figure in mid-step, positioned partially outside an open door while leaning backward with one hand gripping the doorframe and the other hand raised toward the brim of a hat. The figure is rendered with elongated limbs, exaggerated shoes, and loosely draped clothing suggestive of costume attire. Facial features are simplified yet expressive, with wide eyes and darkened shading that enhance a mask-like appearance. The door, depicted at right, is shown ajar with visible knob, hinges, and planar surface defined by linear hatching. From within the doorway, a dense mass of swirling, worm-like organic forms extends outward, filling the upper left quadrant of the composition. These forms overlap, intertwine, and coil, generating rhythmic linear motion that contrasts with the rigid geometry of the doorframe. Shading is achieved through layered pencil strokes and cross-hatching, producing tonal gradations across the fabric folds, facial planes, and receding architectural surfaces. The character’s posture suggests resistance or surprise, with bent knees, angled torso, and wide stride as though attempting to hold back or escape the emerging flow. Proportions are intentionally distorted, with oversized shoes, flared pant legs, and splayed fingers emphasizing theatricality. Background space is left relatively unmarked, allowing the dense linear activity of the organic mass and figure to dominate the visual field. The drawing synthesizes elements of caricature, surrealism, and anatomical experimentation, integrating gestural figuration with imaginative environmental distortion.
This composite image is divided into two sections, connecting the symbolic imagery of Walking Bread with its public presentation in Montreal.

The top panel features a digital collage in the shape of the iconic Walking Bread head. The outline of the sculptural bread-face character is filled with an intricate mosaic of smaller images, including archival illustrations, sketches, portraits, surrealist drawings, anatomical diagrams, and mechanical references. Each tile contributes to the larger silhouette, presenting a layered map of the artistic and research references that inform the project. This collage format emphasizes how Walking Bread is built from multiple overlapping domains: fine art, surrealist history, scientific illustration, experimental cinema, and popular culture.

The bottom panel documents an outdoor scene at WIP (Work In Progress), a cultural venue in Montreal. A group of people gathers in front of the gallery entrance, where large windows reveal artworks and installations inside. This photograph captures the social dimension of the project, with visitors preparing to enter the space where Walking Bread and related works are being presented to the public. The juxtaposition of the collage and the public event connects the project’s dense internal research with its external dissemination and audience engagement.

Together, the two panels highlight the duality of Walking Bread: as a research-driven, reference-heavy conceptual artwork, and as a cultural event circulating in physical exhibition spaces. The image underscores the project’s trajectory from private experimentation to collective experience, reflecting how interdisciplinary practice extends beyond the studio into public discourse.
Close-up view of an individual partially obscured by a large sculptural head covering constructed to resemble an irregular loaf of bread. The headpiece has a bulbous shape with textured surface imitating baked crust, featuring uneven indentations, ridges, and light-toned patches resembling flour residue. Openings are cut into the structure, one of which functions as a vision aperture, though its irregular placement contributes to distorted facial alignment. The material appears flexible but dense, suggesting foam or papier-mâché finished with painted coloration to replicate baked bread surfaces.

A human hand is visible at the lower edge of the frame, pressing against the side of the headpiece, possibly adjusting its fit or securing it in place. The blurred motion indicates active manipulation. Lighting highlights the surface textures, producing shadows across the uneven crust-like ridges.

Background shows an indoor setting with partially deteriorated wall surfaces, including peeling blue and beige paint, exposed plaster, and a wooden doorway. Ceiling junction appears rough, consistent with an unfinished or aged architectural interior. The juxtaposition of deteriorated space and surreal bread headgear amplifies contrast between environment and costumed subject.

The framing emphasizes the bread head occupying the majority of the image, with its exaggerated scale dominating perspective. The piece functions as a wearable sculptural prop, integrating humor, distortion, and anthropomorphic suggestion by substituting bread for a conventional head. The close proximity and blurred motion convey immediacy and tactile engagement within a performance or experimental staging context.
Image depicting a humanoid figure centrally positioned, its head dominated by a distorted mask-like structure that blends characteristics of sculptural surface and organic material. The mask presents elongated facial proportions with a narrow vertical axis, recessed eye sockets rendered as slits, and an angular mouth opening that curves downward into an expression of discomfort or unease. The coloration of the mask is muted purple-grey, with mottled texturing that suggests weathered surface, clay modeling, or aged skin simulation. Irregularities across its surface produce uneven highlights, amplifying impression of material distortion and artifactual construction rather than living tissue.

Covering the figure’s body is a garment of bright yellow hue, contrasting strongly with the muted tones of the mask. The clothing appears simple in design, composed of a hood covering cranial region and fabric wrapping around torso and arms. This saturated chromatic field frames the head, emphasizing its sculptural oddity. Emerging laterally from behind the mask are elongated appendages resembling exaggerated fingers or hornlike protrusions. They appear symmetrically arranged, projecting outward diagonally, their coloration ranging from pale beige to reddish-orange. These elements may be interpreted as prosthetic extensions, costume components, or hybrid appendages that destabilize the viewer’s reading of human anatomy.

The background consists of a uniformly textured green field, likely grass or artificial surface, flattened by shallow depth of field. This neutral but organic backdrop situates the figure within outdoor context, while its chromatic uniformity prevents distraction from central subject. Lighting is diffuse, producing even illumination without sharp shadowing, allowing mask texture, garment saturation, and protruding extensions to remain equally visible.

From a morphological perspective, the composition destabilizes anthropomorphic legibility. The mask face suggests humanoid configuration yet denies individuality through distortion and material strangeness. The yellow garment anchors the figure within costume traditions, simultaneously evoking protective attire, theatrical uniform, or ritual clothing. The protruding extensions further alienate the form, transforming a simple portrait into a hybrid assemblage of costume, prosthetic, and sculptural substitution.

Symbolically, the piece may be read as commentary on identity obscuration and transformation. The mask denies personal recognition, substituting individuality with grotesque anonymity. The extensions distort expected anatomy, evoking hybrid animal or plant growth. The saturated garment suggests artificial performativity, framing the hybridized head in deliberate theatrical coloration. Together these elements imply themes of masquerade, ritual transformation, or absurdist satire.

Technically, the image presents compression artifacts and reduced resolution, producing pixelated textures, particularly across facial mask and green background. Despite quality degradation, essential morphological features remain legible, suggesting that this image may originate from video still or low-resolution photographic documentation. The blurring further abstracts the form, amplifying sense of unreality and estrangement.

At extended descriptive scale, the figure functions as a hybrid artifact at intersection of costume, prosthetic sculpture, and absurdist imagery. The mask substitutes recognizable face with distorted parody, the garment isolates form through bold monochrome, and protruding extensions destabilize anatomical expectation. The green background situates the subject in indeterminate outdoor context, while low resolution inserts further estrangement. The result is an uncanny tableau of identity denial, hybrid transformation, and performative absurdity.
Progressive fabrication process involving structural foam components, cardboard frameworks, adhesive tape, and layered reinforcement, culminating in the development of a volumetric sculptural form resembling a head-shaped mask or prototype. The initial stages show lightweight packing foam segments cut and arranged into semi-arched geometries, with wires, rods, or thin metallic fasteners used to maintain curvature and alignment. The pieces are fixed using adhesive strapping tape, producing a skeletal framework that establishes the spatial outline of the object.
Subsequent stages introduce more complex assemblies where multiple arcs of foam and flexible polymer tubing are joined, forming a cage-like structure. The construction is supported on a circular base or stand, while nearby tools such as scissors, a lamp, a pen, and sketchbooks indicate an active workshop setting. In parallel, sketches on paper depict preliminary contour outlines, cross-sectional planning, and simplified renderings of a head form, linking drawn design studies to physical construction steps. Cardboard strips are progressively integrated, applied in overlapping planes across the foam armature. These pieces are secured with additional adhesive tape, creating a faceted surface that transitions from open skeletal structure to enclosed volumetric shell. The taped cardboard stage demonstrates an intermediate prototype phase where the main head form, including nose protrusion, cheek bulges, and cranial dome, becomes distinguishable, while eye openings remain cut out as voids.
The later stages show a continuous outer surface developed using brown paper or papier-mâché layered across the cardboard foundation. The material has a fibrous texture, visible seams, and irregular tonal variations consistent with dried adhesive or diluted binder solution. Ventilation apertures remain visible as perforations around the eye area. The overall surface is sculpted into a bulbous, organic configuration with frontal symmetry. Illumination varies across images, from neutral daylight and diffuse desk-lamp conditions to a darker setting where directional light emphasizes surface reflectivity. In the final view, highlights and specular reflections produce luminous spots across the textured brown shell, suggesting varnish or dampened finish material under targeted light. Across all frames, the desk workspace remains populated with instruments and containers: adhesive jars, cutting tools, brushes, notepads, and support fixtures. The combination of reference drawings, evolving prototypes, and supporting implements situates the process within a craft-based, iterative workshop environment.
Two-panel vertical composition juxtaposing a stylized anthropomorphic head study with a domestic storage container filled with bread. The upper panel depicts a bust-length head rendered with painterly textures and schematic features. The cranial form is oval, hair indicated with dark textured mass framing the scalp, while ears are symmetrically placed at the sides. The face itself is reduced to minimal symbolic marks: a vertical stroke extending from brow to chin with an upper double curve, flanked by two small circular dots functioning as eyes, and a short line below suggesting a mouth. The surrounding skin surface is mottled with uneven tonal gradients ranging from beige to brown, producing a masklike surface that combines naturalistic shading with abstract reduction. The background is a flat muted surface emphasizing the central head without additional environmental context.

The lower panel presents a rectangular wooden drawer pulled open to reveal multiple loaves of bread arranged tightly inside. The loaves are rectangular with browned crusts and pale interiors visible at cut edges. Surface textures emphasize baked qualities such as crisp outer layers, flour dusting, and irregular crumb exposure. The drawer itself is worn, with a darkened top surface covered in fine residue, scratches, and patina, while the handle is a simple metal loop fixed to the front panel. The scene is illuminated to highlight contrasts between the warm tones of bread and the dark wood of the container.

The diptych juxtaposes schematic human representation with literal bread storage, linking anthropomorphic abstraction to alimentary imagery. The pairing emphasizes conceptual interplay between symbolic head motif and material sustenance, framing both within a shared compositional structure.
Foreground subject stands upright with one hand on hip and the other resting against the waist while positioned before a vertically suspended event backdrop. The backdrop is composed of repeated white logos and text printed on a black surface, displaying the acronym “MAD” in stylized typography, accompanied by supporting institutional identifiers including “Canada,” “Tourisme Montréal,” and “Québec.” The figure is dressed in a monochrome black outfit consisting of a short-sleeved shirt, trousers, and a cross-body satchel worn diagonally across the torso. Footwear includes white athletic shoes with dark stripes, characteristic of mass-produced sports sneakers. The most prominent element is a large sculptural headpiece worn over the subject’s head, constructed from irregularly textured material resembling papier-mâché, foam, or bread-like composites. The headpiece forms an exaggerated caricatured cranium with asymmetrical bulges, protruding masses, and uneven surface morphology, obscuring the wearer’s face entirely. Openings are minimally visible, integrated into recessed zones that may function as vision apertures. The scale of the object extends laterally and vertically beyond natural cranial proportions, producing a volumetric enclosure that dominates the visual composition. Surface coloration is beige to light brown with mottled tonal variation across raised ridges and cavities, simulating organic or baked textures. The subject’s stance and orientation situate the headpiece as the central focal point against the patterned backdrop, juxtaposing sculptural materiality with branded institutional context. The scene documents the convergence of costume fabrication, performative presence, and event-based staging within a public cultural framework.
Rectangular framed mirror positioned diagonally against a wall in a dimly lit corridor, reflecting a wall drawing executed in pale yellow and gray pencil strokes. The drawing depicts an enlarged breadlike or organic head form occupying the upper portion of the reflection, rendered with soft shading and curvilinear contours. Below the figure, large block letters spell out the words “WALKING BREAD” in red, inscribed with uneven spacing and visible hand-drawn pressure marks. The mirror frame is constructed of light-colored wood with visible joints at the corners, enclosing a reflective glass plane that captures the drawing at partial angle distortion. The mirror rests directly on the floor, leaning backward against a vertical surface, with its base stabilized by a stool or small support partially visible within the reflection. The surrounding corridor space is composed of painted walls in neutral gray tones, a dark floor surface with scattered debris and chalk fragments, and partially open doors leading into darker adjoining spaces. Overhead lighting is minimal, casting soft shadows along the floor plane and highlighting the angled geometry of the mirror. The overall scene emphasizes the juxtaposition between functional architectural corridor space and the improvised installation of reflective furniture used to reveal and frame hand-drawn imagery within an otherwise utilitarian environment.
 
  Getting more posts...