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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.

The left projection displays a workspace where tables and walls are densely covered with sheets of paper containing character sketches, sequential panels, and detailed graphite renderings. The ceiling appears bowed due to lens distortion, enclosing the image in a spherical envelope. In the foreground, multiple overlapping sheets show close-up character heads and anatomical variations, while the rear wall is entirely tiled with storyboard-like arrangements.

The right projection continues the spatial documentation, showing an adjacent desk with pinned wall sequences, annotated studies, and color illustrations. The fisheye effect stretches the flat paper surfaces into radial geometries, accentuating their density and distribution. Tables below the walls are piled with additional stacks of drawings, creating continuity between vertical and horizontal archival surfaces.

The overall composition merges architectural capture with visual archive, recording the total immersion of the studio space in sequential drawing processes. The fisheye lens transforms the environment into a near-spherical atlas of production, fusing documentation of physical workspace with the spatial qualities of panoramic optics.
Black-and-white photograph depicting a studio wall covered with printed comic pages taped in vertical sequences. Each sheet contains rectangular panel grids featuring narrative illustrations, with dialogue balloons and text integrated into the layouts. The panels combine silhouetted figures, mid-action gestures, and environmental framing, showing a mixture of intimate character interactions and contextual backdrops.

The sheets are pinned or taped along the wall at eye level, creating a linear archive that allows continuity to be read across multiple pages. Some sheets above remain in sketch or draft format, while others display fully shaded and lettered panels, highlighting different stages of progression from preliminary outline to finalized layout. The tonal quality of the photograph emphasizes the contrast between darker inked regions and pale margins, reinforcing the graphic clarity of sequential art.

The arrangement situates the comic as both narrative and process document, turning the wall into a storyboard-like installation where pacing, flow, and dialogue distribution can be studied. The image captures the transitional phase between design, editing, and narrative refinement, where printed proofs are treated as modular components of a larger sequence.
Large papier-mâché sculptural head positioned on a black tripod stand in the center of a studio workspace. The structure is built from brown kraft paper sheets layered with adhesive, producing a surface of creases, folds, and compressed ridges. Prominent recesses at the front indicate cavities resembling nasal extension and orbital voids, though irregular layering and tearing obscure definitive contours. The surface displays tonal variations from overlapping glued paper layers, emphasizing texture and volumetric irregularity.

The immediate environment includes corrugated cardboard on the floor beneath the tripod to protect the workspace, along with a secondary table holding scattered material offcuts. Behind the form stands a vertical wall panel covered with pinned reference material, including photographic prints, character drawings, and images of earlier sculptural studies. Among them are depictions of bread-based textures, humanoid prototypes, and compositional sketches, suggesting the papier-mâché head functions within a broader iterative design workflow.

The composition situates the object as a fabrication stage within a studio documentation setting, where the papier-mâché mass operates simultaneously as sculptural prototype, textural study, and material experiment aligned with visual research pinned to the surrounding boards.
Image depicts a person standing in front of a wall with multiple sheets of paper pinned in a horizontal sequence. Each sheet contains a hand-drawn sketch executed in pencil or similar medium, showing simplified figures, anatomical outlines, or gestural forms. The arrangement of papers is linear, resembling a storyboard or visual sequence used for planning or instruction. The presenter is gesturing toward the sketches with one hand extended, while facing slightly toward the camera. The person is dressed in a textured sweater, and the setting suggests an interior workspace or studio environment with neutral-colored walls. The drawings vary in complexity, from minimal line outlines to more detailed anatomical or gestural representations, likely depicting different stages of movement or conceptual exploration. The overall setup indicates a process of visual explanation, collaborative review, or instructional demonstration within an artistic, educational, or research-based context.
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 lower portion of the composition consists of a panoramic fisheye view split into two circular frames, capturing an interior studio space. Both hemispherical views display wooden desks covered with tools, models, and sculptural elements, including anatomical reference bones. Walls are densely covered with pinned sketches, large-scale drawings, and papers arranged in layered rows. Lighting enters through side windows, illuminating surfaces and generating contrast between workspace clutter and surrounding vertical displays. Objects on the desks include drawing materials, reference charts, and partially completed studies, reinforcing the environment as a working studio.

The juxtaposition of the fantastical drawing above with immersive panoramic documentation below emphasizes continuity between imaginative creation and material workspace. This composite integrates surreal hybrid subject matter with the archival representation of the artist’s process and physical environment.
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.

In the left hemisphere, a workstation occupies the foreground, including a desk scattered with documents, sketch materials, and technical apparatus. The back wall is covered almost entirely with pinned drawings, reference clippings, and large-scale illustrations arranged in overlapping layers. The papers extend across nearly every vertical surface, turning the walls into a continuous collage of visual information. The fisheye distortion curves the room’s geometry, exaggerating the ceiling height and compressing spatial depth, reinforcing the immersive nature of the capture.

The right hemisphere emphasizes another wall almost fully wallpapered with drawings, diagrams, and printouts. The circular lensing bends the horizon, wrapping the wall surface around the field of view. Numerous sheets display anatomical sketches, architectural forms, and surreal compositional studies, functioning as a live archive of ongoing research and experimentation.

The dividing line between the two hemispheres creates a stereographic duality, allowing a viewer to perceive the environment as both split and continuous. Surfaces like tables and desks run across both halves, further linking the dual perspectives into a coherent whole. The immersive format situates the viewer in the center of an information-saturated studio, emphasizing the density of references and the integrative workflow between physical sketches and spatial surroundings.

The photograph as a whole operates as both documentation and spatial mapping, highlighting the studio not only as a place of production but as an architectural container of images, notes, and visual research. The distorted fisheye view accentuates the overwhelming scale and recursive logic of the creative process, making the room appear as an enveloping dome of references.
This composite image is separated into two distinct sections that juxtapose artistic creation with its surrounding environment.

The top portion features a highly detailed ink drawing depicting a surreal hybrid between an infant and a steam locomotive. The child figure, shown in a fetal or curled position, is anatomically recognizable by the shape of its head, limbs, and torso, but the body is fused seamlessly with mechanical structures. A cylindrical boiler runs across the torso, with visible gears, riveted plates, and piping extending outward. Metallic wheels and pistons substitute for parts of the anatomy, transforming the child into a biomechanical entity. The style employs cross-hatching and layered shading, giving depth and texture both to the softness of flesh and the hardness of steel. This merging of organic and industrial elements suggests themes of mechanization of life, industrial birth, or the interdependence of human vulnerability and technological structures.

The lower portion consists of two fisheye, 360-degree photographs of the artist’s studio, each presented in circular frames. On the left, the fisheye perspective shows a workspace with multiple walls entirely covered in pinned sketches and drawings, surrounding desks scattered with tools and materials. A circular diagram occupies the foreground table, possibly a draft for animation or mechanical studies. On the right, the alternate fisheye capture presents another angle of the same environment: a cluttered wooden table with paper, drawing instruments, and a large shell positioned in the center. The walls once again reveal dozens of pinned sheets, filling the room with visual references, rough sketches, and completed artworks. The lighting is natural, filtering through a window to the right, creating an immersive sense of being inside an intensive creative workspace.

Together, these two sections link the conceptual artwork with the physical studio context in which it is developed. The juxtaposition emphasizes not only the act of drawing but also the infrastructure of research, experimentation, and documentation that supports such production. The combination of biological imagery, industrial machinery, and immersive studio photography situates the piece within themes of hybridization, process documentation, and the overlap between artistic imagination and physical labor.
This image captures a large-scale sculptural prototype in progress for Walking Bread, mounted on a black stand inside a studio environment. The central object is a bread-inspired head form, roughly spherical and volumetric, constructed from brown-toned materials and partially encased in transparent plastic wrapping for structural support, protection, or shaping purposes. Suspended within the main cavity is a smaller orb wrapped in cling film, resembling an internal core or placeholder structure. The translucent wrapping reveals layers of the underlying texture, combining crumpled paper, adhesive tape, and possible bread-textured components. This hybrid construction embodies an experimental stage in puppet or prop development, aligning with the project’s focus on integrating bread materiality into character and set design.

The background provides additional context: pinned to the white partition wall are multiple photographic references, printed sketches, and documentation images directly tied to Walking Bread. These pinned visuals include bread-sculpture studies, drawn face designs, and previous photographic experiments, functioning as a research mood board. The setting features a raw concrete column and wooden desk surfaces, situating the prototype within an active production workshop. This photograph functions as an archival record of iterative building techniques where sculptural experimentation, material improvisation, and studio workflow intersect. It highlights both the tactile craft processes and the conceptual layering central to the visual identity of Walking Bread.
Composite image combining character design sketches and a traditional animation studio setup. On the left, two panels show drawings of human-like legs. The upper sketch depicts legs in motion with added color, including yellow, pink, and blue accents, paired with stylized footwear. The lower sketch presents a simpler black-and-white outline of legs and boots, focusing on structural proportions and stance. Both drawings emphasize anatomical exaggeration, suggesting preparatory studies for animated movement sequences.

On the right, a wooden animation desk is displayed, equipped with a tilting surface and integrated lightbox for tracing sequential drawings. The desk holds stacks of animation paper, pencils, and tools for draftsmanship. Mounted lamps with adjustable arms flank the workstation, providing directed illumination. Behind the desk, walls are densely covered with pinned sheets of sketches and storyboard panels. These pinned papers show a wide range of drawings, from character studies to complex compositional layouts, forming a reference archive for ongoing animation projects.

The juxtaposition of individual leg studies with the full studio context highlights the iterative process of traditional animation: small-scale anatomical sketches inform larger sequences developed on a lightbox. The environment demonstrates manual, paper-based animation practice with emphasis on repetition, refinement, and physical drafting.
Interior of an animation workspace captured during documentation filming, showing a camera operator positioned at the center adjusting a professional video camera mounted on a tripod. The operator, wearing casual clothing, is angled slightly toward the left where the workstation is located. The tripod-mounted camera is a broadcast-quality unit with an extended microphone and mounted accessories, directed toward the desk and wall. The workspace itself is densely covered with pinned sheets of paper along the walls, each featuring sequential character sketches, line drawings, and storyboard-like arrangements. The repeated imagery suggests iterative design and animation workflow, with anthropomorphic figures appearing consistently across multiple sheets.

The left side of the room contains a desk crowded with papers, open sketchbooks, and printed drawings stacked in irregular piles. A computer monitor faces outward, partially visible among the workspace clutter, while a cabinet in the corner holds additional pinned drawings and taped references. Lighting is soft and natural, illuminating the surfaces of the paper-covered walls and providing ambient visibility across the studio environment.

The composition emphasizes the act of cinematic documentation within a production setting, combining tools of animation (drawings, storyboards, sketches) with tools of filmmaking (tripod camera, operator). The scene highlights the intersection of two processes: the creation of hand-drawn imagery and its capture through audiovisual media, situating the workspace as both a site of production and archiving.
 
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