FeedIndex
Filter: space  view all
Close-up documentation of a drawing process viewed through the circular aperture of a magnifying lamp. The lamp, positioned centrally, forms a dark circular frame with its lens magnifying the active drawing beneath. A hand in mid-motion occupies the lower portion of the composition, applying lines with a pencil to a sheet of paper resting on a wooden surface. The subject of the drawing is a detailed anthropomorphic head rendered in graphite, with complex textural folds, overlapping anatomical distortions, and layered structural elements.

The paper surface is partially obscured by the magnifier’s frame, but visible sections reveal concentric contour lines and shading gradually building depth. The artist’s sleeve, made of ribbed fabric in gray tones, extends from the left edge, further emphasizing the human scale of the working process. The lighting is concentrated beneath the magnifier, producing a bright illuminated disc contrasting with the surrounding darker workspace.

The composition merges functional documentation of process with strong formal geometry: circular lamp, round aperture, magnified illuminated field, and radial arrangement of pencil marks. This creates a layered relationship between drawing, optical enlargement, and bodily gesture, situating the act of hand rendering as both technical and performative.
Composite vertical photograph split into two sections. The upper portion shows a workspace with walls entirely covered by printed storyboard sheets arranged in continuous grid sequences, extending across multiple surfaces to form a dense archive. A seated individual works at a desk in the center, with stacks of papers and tools spread across the tabletop. In the corner, a large coiled material resembling tubing or rolled paper rests against the wall, reinforcing the immersive accumulation of visual documentation.

The lower portion depicts a sculptural-mechanical apparatus constructed from metal supports, wiring, and motorized components. The machine incorporates organic bagels mounted onto rods, positioned near a camera-like housing or robotic sensor array. Below, numerous elongated pink tubing elements cascade outward, wrapping around the framework in tangled formation. The apparatus rests on a table among scattered notebooks, pens, and tools, while in the background large painted canvases and wooden supports lean against the wall, situating the setup within a multipurpose studio environment.

Together, the two halves document both the narrative planning and mechanical experimentation involved in fabrication processes. The juxtaposition connects drawn sequencing, dense visual planning, and improvised sculptural robotics incorporating everyday edible forms as structural material.
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.
Vertical triptych showing three stages of a performance or installation setup combining projection, fabric screens, and costumed figure interaction. The top frame depicts a draped black backdrop spanning the width of the space, against which lighter cloth panels are suspended from a wooden pole structure. A humanoid figure in light-colored costume stands beside the hanging textiles, extending an arm toward them. The middle frame introduces projected imagery: the phrase “WALKING BREAD” is cast across the central cloth surface in bold lettering, illuminated in bright cyan and red tones against the darkened environment. Red light floods the surrounding space, intensifying the theatrical effect. The lower frame shows continued interaction between the figure and the suspended cloth, with the projection shifting to abstract shapes and patterns across the black backdrop.

The installation combines static physical staging—wooden support poles, draped cloth, costumed performer—with dynamic light projection, creating layered visual fields where text, pattern, and fabric overlap. Spatial contrasts emerge between the heavy black backdrop and the illuminated projection zones, reinforcing the dual presence of physical material and transient digital imagery. The piece situates itself at the intersection of performance, projection mapping, and experimental scenography.
Composite arrangement of forty-eight rectangular frames organized into three stacked tiers, each section containing visual progressions rendered in digitally composited painterly textures with soft color blending and anthropomorphic reduction. Uppermost row consists of six consecutive frames showing gradual emergence of cranial dome structure from side angles into frontal alignment. The form is characterized by spherical head volume devoid of conventional facial differentiation, defined instead by centrally inscribed bifurcated line extending vertically downward across smooth surface. Chromatic treatment alternates between beige, sepia, and muted shadow gradients, while background surfaces maintain subdued neutral tones.

Central band contains enlarged single frame dominating width of sequence. Within this compartment the humanoid head structure fills majority of composition, frontal orientation emphasized by direct placement against backdrop of vertical curtain folds and diffuse daylight filtering through window. Head lacks eyes, nose, or mouth, instead retaining same bifurcated linear incision across surface. Hands extend from lower boundary, fingers bent around cylindrical inflated object with translucent casing, containing central emblem in form of circular disc with intersecting diagonal bar motif. Chromatic palette combines muted flesh tones, brown overlays, and metallic highlights on circular emblem, producing material contrast between organic curvature and synthetic geometry.

Lowest tier consists of densely packed grid containing forty-one smaller frames, each depicting variations of humanoid interacting with cylindrical structure. Figures alternate between reclining, pressing, clasping, or leaning upon object. Repetition emphasizes mechanical iteration of similar form across diverse spatial orientations. Some panels accentuate tactile interaction where hands press into inflated material producing surface deformation, while others focus on cranial juxtaposition against object, highlighting continuity of spherical head volume across repetitive positioning. Backgrounds remain consistent with domestic interiors characterized by muted walls, curtains, and diffuse daylight illumination, anchoring iterative forms within fixed environment.

Throughout montage perspective shifts from oblique angles to frontal compression, scale varying between close-up magnification and distant framing. Rendering technique emphasizes painterly softness with blurred contours, layered digital brush textures, and muted chromatic saturation, producing synthetic aesthetic resembling composited photographic-painterly hybrid. Structural motif relies on juxtaposition of simplified cranial geometry, linear incision marker, and inflated cylindrical object with emblematic circular disc. Sequential arrangement across tiers establishes thematic continuum of emergence, confrontation, tactile engagement, and iterative variation. Figures remain non-individualized, constructed through schematic reduction of anatomical detail, presented instead as generalized humanoid volumes interacting with engineered material form.
Monochrome ink illustration depicting mechanical derailment scenario with train components forming improbable arched trajectory above ground-level architectural structure. At left margin, detailed steam locomotive is drawn with cylindrical boiler, smokestack, front cowcatcher, and visible wheel assemblies rendered in tonal cross-hatching. Locomotive connects to freight wagons via couplings, yet central sequence of five rectangular cars is shown lifted into air, bending upward into semi-circular arc suspended over small rural train station. Each wagon is rendered in three-quarter perspective with visible plank textures, panel divisions, steel underframes, and wheel bogies exaggerated by foreshortening.

Central portion emphasizes symmetrical curvature of airborne freight units, forming arch-like structure across page width. Middle car at apex balances vertically, while adjacent wagons tilt at steep diagonal angles, couplers strained in exaggerated mechanical linkage. Ground line contains linear rail track drawn as double parallel lines with cross-ties, anchoring composition horizontally. Beneath arc stands compact wooden station building with gabled roof, central door, flanking windows, and flag mounted on pole at platform edge. Station rendered with linear shading and tonal wash, proportionally dwarfed by oversized arched train mass above.

Background is minimal, consisting of faint tonal staining and paper texture, avoiding environmental detail to emphasize graphic clarity of mechanical structure. Shading applied through ink wash and hatching produces volumetric depth across wagon surfaces and locomotive body, while leaving negative space largely unmodulated. Contrast between dense mechanical texture and blank atmospheric background highlights improbable geometry of derailment arch.

Perspective remains schematic, with figures and station aligned along linear baseline, while train cars exaggerate non-naturalistic upward curvature. Rendering style integrates architectural draftsmanship with surreal mechanical distortion, creating hybrid technical-artistic composition. Overall visual effect conveys paradoxical suspension of massive industrial elements arranged into arch formation, integrating realism of locomotive detailing with surreal impossibility of structural configuration.
Image montage combining three photographs arranged in two horizontal tiers. Upper tier divided into two exterior architectural views of contemporary cultural venue. Left frame shows wide-angle nighttime perspective of building with sweeping metallic roof canopy perforated by numerous circular apertures, illuminated from beneath to create star-like light pattern. Entrance forecourt populated with groups of people, signage, and landscaped perimeter. Right frame depicts frontal view of same structure in daylight, emphasizing central V-shaped canyon-like cut through metallic cladding, leading inward toward glass façade and recessed main entrance. Pedestrian circulation visible with attendees moving in and out, contextualizing building as active public venue.

Lower tier displays interior auditorium environment. Perspective is from rear seating rows looking toward projection screen. Ceiling and sidewalls covered in ribbed acoustic paneling with dark matte finish, designed for optimal sound diffusion. On central screen is projected image of humanoid bust with turbine engine replacing facial features. Circular nacelle with radial fan blades occupies position of face, flanked by partial head contours and neck. Projection framed within cinematic widescreen proportions, filling lower half of composition. Ambient lighting minimal, emphasizing luminous contrast of projection image against darkened theatre.

Overall composition juxtaposes exterior architectural form and public gathering spaces with interior cinematic experience. Exterior imagery emphasizes iconic design language of perforated metallic cladding, geometric cuts, and open pedestrian corridors. Interior imagery highlights cinematic function, technical acoustic treatment, and visual content on screen. Montage underscores relationship between built environment as cultural infrastructure and its role as container for mediated audiovisual presentation.
Photograph of hand-held mixed-media collage poster composed of layered printed material, handwritten elements, and colored marker interventions, arranged across vertically oriented sheet of paper with irregular placement and overlapping fragments, overall composition creating dense and playful visual field. Upper right quadrant features large circular zone filled with red marker shading containing central inscription “ALEX” in black capital letters, surrounded by cutout text blocks and slogans including “Far-Out Facts” and “Kids Did It!” Above left quadrant includes rectangular insert with French instruction “APPUYEZ” in large type above numbered text strip, adjacent to smaller clipped advertisements and beverage photograph, while vertical margin on left edge contains sequence of letters “OABSTABR” and additional symbols aligned downward.

Center of composition incorporates photographic cutout of white rabbit on orange background with accompanying caption “PSSST Have you heard?” Lower region of sheet dominated by repeated rectangular panels showing yellow-green gradient fields with overprinted purple paw-like motifs and bold slogan “Elle l’a vu” in black rectangular label, phrase repeated multiple times to establish visual rhythm. Additional cartoon-like stickers and colored illustrations with footprints, arrows, and graphic embellishments occupy surrounding spaces, while freehand marker strokes in red, green, and blue add texture across empty areas.

Poster edges show curling and folds, indicating handmade assembly from diverse sources including magazines, advertisements, packaging, and direct drawing, each layered to form scrapbook aesthetic. Background setting includes desk with scattered papers, indicating context of creative workspace. Overall composition combines fragmented commercial imagery, playful cartoon iconography, multilingual typography, and handwritten emphasis to create eclectic assemblage functioning as personalized expressive collage.
Photograph showing human hand holding torn fragment of lined notepad paper, irregularly ripped at top with black ink stains creating jagged contour, lower edge partially covered with dark tape or painted strip. Writing in thick black marker across center reads “SMELL ME NOW” in uppercase block letters, uneven in spacing and stroke density, producing raw improvised appearance. Paper fragment shows faint printed horizontal ruling lines, suggesting origin from spiral-bound notebook with detached edge fibers visible at top margin.

Background environment features wooden parquet floor with scattered papers piled near base of wall, supporting board leaned against wall surface above pile, overall suggesting disorganized interior workspace or storage area. Lighting originates from natural daylight entering from left side, illuminating hand and note clearly while background remains subdued.

Image composition emphasizes immediacy of handwritten message, combining informal materiality of scrap paper with forceful textual command. The direct imperative creates unsettling tension between everyday medium and urgency of phrase. Integration of rough edges, marker bleeding, and taped section adds to distressed and provisional character of artifact.
 
  Getting more posts...