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Page layout consisting of eight rectangular panels arranged in a grid, progressing from near-blank space at the top through increasingly detailed depictions of a devastated landscape. The imagery includes barbed wire fences, windmills, and jagged debris scattered across barren ground, evoking battlefield topographies with traces of ruined structures and fragmented vegetation. Sparse sky bands and horizon lines establish a repetitive panoramic format, giving continuity across panels while emphasizing shifts in surface detail.

In the lower sequence, debris-strewn terrain transitions into imagery of plant-like formations. The final two panels show large-scale organic growth, with the concluding frame dominated by a massive leafy form resembling cabbage or lettuce, emerging amidst the war-torn setting. The gradual metamorphosis from destruction to vegetal presence situates the sequence as a study of environmental transformation, layering industrial remnants with natural regeneration.

The visual language employs ink-line contours, gray tonal washes, and occasional green highlights, contrasting devastation with emergent organic vitality. The grid arrangement reinforces its identity as storyboard or comic structure, where progression across frames functions narratively and formally.
Two-page comic spread combining sequential ink drawing and tonal coloring to narrate the transformation of humanoid figures into bread-based entities. The first page presents an arched, tunnel-like industrial space where a conveyor belt carries multiple rounded figures toward a large loaf positioned centrally in the foreground, marked with cross-cut insignia. The imagery emphasizes a factory-like environment, with heavy architectural framing and repetitive character positioning.

On the opposite page, circular-headed figures undergo progressive metamorphosis. Panels depict heads opening, folding, and reshaping, transitioning gradually into loaves with textured crusts. The captions reinforce the sequential transformation, pairing imagery of anatomical abstraction with bread morphology. Figures are staged in tight, overlapping compositions that stress collective mutation rather than individual identity.

The lower section continues with more elaborate interactions, where groups of anthropomorphic bread-beings engage in gestural exchanges and crowd scenes. Panel arrangement alternates between large dramatic compositions and smaller inset frames, combining close-up detail of surface textures with broader collective views. The visual style merges fine-lined hatching, stippling, and tonal washes with brown-gold coloration, evoking the visual character of baked surfaces integrated with anatomical distortion.
This composite documentation image captures multiple stages of the Walking Bread production process, uniting storyboard design, physical mock-up, hybrid digital installation, and visual sequencing.

At the top, small storyboard panels depict a progression of abstracted bread-figure transformations. Each frame contains drawn annotations, arrows, and notes indicating timing and spatial orientation. These thumbnails distill narrative beats into simplified visual codes, providing the skeleton for more elaborate developments.

The center section illustrates a hybrid setup where a drawn bread-headed puppet figure interacts with a scaled miniature set. A cut-out environment with architectural motifs and physical textures extends the storyboard into dimensional space. The figure is drawn in thick black outlines, its position coordinated with the background structures, while a green field digitally frames the scene. On the right, this installation is extended into a projected environment displayed on a large monitor, where additional bread motifs, parachutes, and surreal aerial devices populate the space. This integration of drawn figure, physical mock-up, and digital projection reveals how analog and digital practices interweave in the evolving workflow.

At the bottom, an additional storyboard strip emphasizes bread morphologies. Loaves and crusts undergo sequential transformations into heads, mouths, and faces, bridging food matter with character identity. These panels anchor the experimental design process in recurring bread imagery, ensuring continuity across stages.

Overall, the image functions as a layered diagram of how Walking Bread progresses from small-scale conceptual drawings, through physicalized experimentation with sets and figures, into immersive projection scenarios. It highlights the film’s methodological hybridity: paper sketches, miniature props, digital visualization, and speculative environments operate together as one production pipeline.
Enclosed workspace illuminated by linear fluorescent fixtures suspended from the ceiling, casting diffused light across an array of fabrication materials, tools, and partially assembled structures. Two individuals stand centrally within the environment: one positioned on the left wearing brown work overalls layered over a dark shirt, the other positioned to the right dressed in patterned upper clothing and darker trousers. Both figures occupy a cleared floor section bordered by a dense arrangement of objects. Foreground includes cylindrical metal stools, welding apparatus, coiled cables, clamps, metallic rods, and containers filled with fasteners and components. Various buckets, plastic crates, and open boxes hold mixed supplies, while portable power tools and manual instruments remain scattered across workbenches. Mid-ground reveals shelving units and vertical storage racks holding rigid panels, cut wood sections, coiled wire, and disassembled mechanical components. Rear wall surfaces display mounted objects including circular metallic discs, framed pieces, and wall-mounted tools. Elevated storage areas overhead accommodate larger sculptural fragments and irregular forms. Left side of the frame shows a partially obscured seating arrangement draped with protective fabric covers, adjacent to additional stacked items. The environment exhibits layered accumulation of materials, evidence of repeated use, and multi-purpose activity involving metalwork, assembly, and sculptural fabrication. Spatial organization is non-linear, with overlapping clusters of objects and tools defining zones of activity rather than strict separation.
 
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