Spherical panoramic image captured using a dual fisheye lens system, showing an enclosed studio environment split into two adjacent circular projections. Each hemisphere distorts the perspective, producing curved walls, floors, and ceilings that converge toward the periphery. The left circular frame reveals a workspace with desks, shelving, and pinned artwork. Papers cover the vertical surfaces, displaying numerous character sketches, head studies, and sequential figure variations taped in grid-like arrangements. A lamp, chair, and shelving with stacked materials are visible along the left perimeter.The right circular frame focuses on a wall densely covered with printed sheets arranged in large vertical panels. The papers depict schematic diagrams, illustrations of anthropomorphic heads, and tonal studies, filling the surface in overlapping layers. A desk surface in the foreground is covered with additional papers, books, and circular design motifs. The fisheye distortion curves straight lines, bending walls and tables into arcs.
The combined stereographic image emphasizes the density of creative material within the workspace. Hundreds of sheets form an archive-like atmosphere, blending documentation, concept development, and visual iteration. The fisheye capture method highlights spatial totality, situating the viewer inside the environment with immersive distortion.
Panoramic stereographic photograph combining two hemispherical fisheye perspectives of a studio interior entirely filled with paper drawings. Both halves present immersive distorted perspectives in which straight lines curve into arcs, bending walls, desks, and ceilings around circular horizons.
Upper portion features a detailed ink-and-wash drawing of a human infant figure fused with mechanical locomotive components. The child’s body is curled laterally, with facial features, limbs, and hand gestures integrated into the structure of a steam engine. Cylindrical boiler, wheels, pistons, and connecting rods extend from the torso and back, merging organic musculature with engineered machinery. Shading is rendered with cross-hatching and fluid ink strokes, producing a blend of anatomical softness and metallic rigidity. The infant’s hand is raised toward its mouth in a natural gesture, contrasting the mechanical extensions emerging from its body.
The image is presented in a dual circular fisheye perspective, characteristic of immersive 360-degree photography or virtual reality capture, dividing the studio space into two hemispheric views side by side. Both spheres provide distorted yet comprehensive panoramas of an artist’s working environment densely layered with pinned, taped, and stacked sheets of paper.
This dual-lens fisheye capture offers a fully immersive glimpse into the workspace where the Walking Bread mythology takes shape. The spherical perspective splits into two overlapping domes, turning the studio into a warped cognitive chamber where sketches, prototypes, and conceptual diagrams engulf the walls and surfaces.
