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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.
Enclosed interior space configured with white painted walls exhibiting expansive graphite and pastel line drawings covering surface area. The drawing features large biomorphic forms resembling anatomical contours, with sweeping arcs, elliptical curves, and intersecting linear strokes rendered in subdued tones of gray, black, and pale yellow. The composition extends across the wall plane at left, continuing toward adjacent surfaces where proportional enlargement suggests macro-scale figure fragments. Lines vary in density, with some areas appearing faintly outlined while others intensify into darker tonal accumulations, establishing volumetric impression and layered structural definition.

At the right side of the image, an open door reveals a mounted vertical mirror reflecting a continuation of the same drawn subject. In the reflection, curved organic shapes are duplicated, including a prominent teardrop-like form occupying the central axis of the mirrored surface. Text overlay within the reflection appears partially visible, presenting lines of printed words, though legibility is obscured by angle and shadow. Lower portion of reflection reveals a container holding multiple small boxed units, placed along the floor, suggesting storage of supplies or packaged items.

Illumination originates from overhead fixtures outside the camera frame, distributing diffuse light across surfaces. The absence of windows or exterior light indicates full reliance on artificial lighting, which enhances the flatness of white walls while accentuating the subtle gradations of pencil and pastel markings. Floor is coated with dark finish material, contrasting with pale vertical walls. Door hardware consists of a round metallic knob affixed to right edge.

Spatial arrangement establishes layered perception where primary drawings are visible directly on the wall and secondarily within the mirror reflection. The dual presence reinforces the immersive scale of the graphic intervention, situating the viewer within a room-sized composition. Integration of reflective surface creates recursive spatial effect, extending drawn lines into virtual continuation beyond the physical wall. The artwork utilizes architectural envelope as drawing substrate, transforming conventional wall surfaces into oversized pictorial field combining anatomical suggestion with abstract contour mapping.
 
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