FeedIndex
Filter: stacked  view all
Interior photograph of a bookstore or independent shop specializing in comics, zines, and small press publications. The composition centers on a wooden display shelf containing two featured works: on the left, Little Angels by Aidan Koch, bound in a red cover with white text and geometric illustration, and in the middle, a black-and-white illustrated book cover depicting a dense mechanical-anatomical hybrid drawing. To the right, a label on the shelf divider reads: “MINI COMICS, ARTIST’S BOOKS, AND ZINES,” situating the section as a curated space for experimental and self-published works.

Beneath the shelf, a dense arrangement of books, zines, and graphic publications fill the foreground. Covers feature vibrant colors, bold typography, and varied graphic styles, including horror-themed imagery (Creepshow), abstract linework, and character-based comics. The shelving arrangement is eclectic, mixing horizontal stacks with vertical displays, creating a layered field of visual information. Background shelves lined with taller books extend upward, forming a library-like wall of spines and adding depth to the composition.

The image emphasizes the material density and diversity of independent print culture, highlighting connections between illustration, narrative experimentation, and publishing in physical formats. The arrangement functions both as retail display and as a catalog of visual practices, situating comics and zines within the continuum of contemporary art and publishing.
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.
Digital composition integrating organic, mechanical, and symbolic components within a unified pictorial field. Foreground features two anthropomorphic hybrids placed at enlarged vertical scale relative to architectural framework beneath. Left figure presents torso clothed in formal attire, jacket rendered with shaded folds, lapel seams, and layered tonal gradients. Cranial region replaced by cylindrical metallic turbine nacelle, complete with concentric rotor blades radiating from central hub and pointed conical nose extending outward. Hair mass retains painted reddish-brown texture, cropped above turbine interface, emphasizing juxtaposition of organic bodily remnants with engineered aerodynamic mechanism. Right figure exhibits bread-like anthropomorphic morphology, rounded head with mottled crust surface integrating exaggerated bulbous nose structure, collapsed cheek curvature, closed eyelid arcs, and auricular swellings resembling deformed ear-like protrusions. Flesh-toned pigmentation incorporates pink, beige, and brown overlays, producing tactile resemblance to baked material fused with distorted anatomical volumes.

Both figures are positioned directly above dense architectural network extending across lower section. Built environment is represented as complex wireframe matrix resembling technical drafting. Architectural motifs include cylindrical tanks, lattice trusses, conduits, domes, angular facades, and stacked rectangular structures, interconnected into sprawling industrial-urban assemblage. Linear execution alternates between bold dark outlines and fine etched cross-contours, establishing depth layering without atmospheric perspective. Built system resembles schematic urban blueprint, functioning as skeletal infrastructure upon which monumental hybrids preside.

Background introduces dominant symbolic element: red maple leaf rendered as flat geometric silhouette occupying entire upper field. The sharp angular lobes extend laterally behind humanoid figures, creating visual framing device while simultaneously signaling cultural emblem associated with national identity. The chromatic field is flat and saturated, contrasting against earthy tonal gradients of figures and monochrome architectural base.

Spatial hierarchy organizes composition into three strata: lower technical city framework, central hybrid figures, and upper symbolic emblem. This tripartite arrangement emphasizes vertical dominance of human-machine hybrids anchored by architectural complexity and crowned by cultural insignia. Material contrast defines relationship: painterly rendering of heads and torsos, linear drafting of city, and flat symbolic geometry of maple leaf. Formal continuity maintained through repetition of circular motifs (turbine rotor, cranial dome, domes in architecture) and angular motifs (building facades, maple leaf lobes, garment folds).

Overall design synthesizes technical schematic, surreal figuration, and emblematic symbolism into single visual plane. It highlights interaction between organic morphology, engineered machinery, infrastructural construction, and national iconography. Rendering technique combines digital compositing, painterly surface simulation, and vector-like symbolic geometry, producing hybrid aesthetic bridging realism, draftsmanship, and poster graphics. Figures occupy central monumental status, emerging as symbolic overseers of infrastructural environment beneath and contextualized within larger cultural reference implied by maple leaf.
Two-line textual graphic presented in uppercase serif typography, phrase reading “BREAD WILL” on first line and “WALK” on second line. Lettering executed in pale beige color against black background, producing high-contrast legibility. Typeface characterized by flared stroke endings, variable line thickness, and slightly irregular contours, evoking hand-carved or distressed qualities rather than uniform digital precision. Vertical strokes in characters such as “L” and “K” exhibit uneven weight distribution, while serifs extend asymmetrically with subtle curvature. The “B” features enlarged lower bowl relative to upper, “A” maintains sharp apex with slightly irregular crossbar, and “K” demonstrates extended diagonal leg intersecting vertical stem at steep angle. Spacing between characters is balanced but intentionally uneven, creating organic rhythm across word blocks.

Layout is centered, with first line shorter in horizontal extent than second line, producing pyramidal visual structure emphasizing “WALK.” Lower right corner contains ellipsis composed of two diminishing dots in same beige tone, visually tapering phrase forward. Background is flat and uninterrupted, enhancing silhouette of letters without distraction. Chromatic scheme limited to binary palette of pale beige and black, emphasizing contrast and minimalism.

Visual treatment suggests design intended as emblematic title graphic, suitable for poster, promotional material, or narrative branding. Execution emphasizes bold legibility, distressed handcrafted aesthetic, and symbolic arrangement of words. Letterform irregularities and surface texture produce tactile quality resembling aged print or letterpress impression. Composition balances clarity of text with expressive individuality of typeface, resulting in typographic image functioning simultaneously as linguistic statement and graphic emblem.
Digital composite illustration depicting anthropomorphic bust constructed from mechanical and culinary components. Head region consists of large turbine engine nacelle replacing facial structure, circular housing rendered in metallic gray with radial fan blades extending inward from central hub. Hair rendered with smooth digital brush strokes overlays upper section, styled in short layered strands. Torso and cranial interior are filled with stratified cake slices, each section differentiated by alternating layers of sponge, cream, fruit, and icing, producing cross-sectional appearance of layered desserts. Embedded confections include round pastries, cupcakes topped with frosting and fruit, dome-shaped cakes, and cylindrical desserts stacked along torso cavity.

Surrounding mechanical framework incorporates metallic tubing, hydraulic pistons, bolts, and jointed structural rods interwoven with confectionery units. Lower torso filled with cakes arranged in circular formation, surfaces decorated with strawberries, cherries, cream swirls, and sugar glaze. Shoulders reveal integration of pistons and gears aligned with dessert layers, juxtaposing industrial precision with organic culinary texture. Chromatic scheme contrasts metallic silvers and grays of turbine and mechanical parts with saturated pinks, browns, creams, and reds of desserts.

Proportions approximate natural bust silhouette, though components displace anatomical features with culinary-mechanical hybridization. Background rendered in smooth gradient pale gray, isolating subject without distraction. Visual hierarchy emphasizes turbine-head as focal point, descending into cake-laden torso supported by mechanical scaffolding. Stylistic treatment combines hyper-realistic texturing of cakes and metallic surfaces with surreal anatomical substitution, merging food illustration, technical rendering, and portrait format.
Composite bust-shaped construct integrates heterogeneous elements comprising metallic turbine assembly, confectionery products, layered pastry segments, and mechanical infrastructure arranged in anthropomorphic silhouette. Cranial region is substituted by circular jet turbine engine embedded in frontal facial zone, displaying radial fan blades enclosed in cylindrical casing with metallic sheen. Posterior head retains hair-textured covering, maintaining partial organic simulation while frontal substitution emphasizes industrial apparatus. Cervical and thoracic sections are occupied by stratified cake slices arranged horizontally, exhibiting alternating layers of sponge, cream, and icing, colored in yellow, pink, and chocolate tones. Surrounding structural matrix incorporates metallic conduits, jointed pistons, hydraulic tubing, and bolted plates, forming biomechanical scaffold supporting edible components.

Peripheral regions incorporate numerous complete pastries including frosted cupcakes topped with fruit garnishes, layered gateaux with cream decorations, round cheesecakes, cylindrical sponge rolls, and dome-like glazed sweets. These elements are positioned within cavities of the mechanical framework, alternating between visible metallic infrastructure and edible insertions. Lower torso portion presents extensive assembly of cakes and pastries arranged in sequential order, highlighting variation in form, icing coloration, and garnishing details such as strawberries, cherries, and cream swirls. Textural representation differentiates smooth metallic sheen of machinery from porous sponge interiors and glossy icing surfaces, while layered coloration accentuates contrast between industrial greys and vibrant confectionery hues.

Overall silhouette adheres to bust configuration, with shoulders delineated by rounded outlines integrating mechanical joints and layered pastry constructs. Internal cavity cross-sections reveal juxtaposition of mechanical tubing interlaced with edible layers, implying symbiotic embedding of organic consumption products within artificial skeletal infrastructure. Arrangement demonstrates deliberate fusion of aeronautical turbine engineering with culinary patisserie design, establishing contrast between propulsion technology and domestic food preparation artifacts. The juxtaposition produces hybrid artifact uniting mechanical propulsion, anthropomorphic form, and edible architecture within a singular composite visual system.
Graphite drawing on vertically oriented sheet depicts anthropomorphic hybrid figure constructed from organic and bread-like anatomical structures. Cranial region consists of circular loaf-shaped mass marked by surface cracking and porous interior detailing, with irregular openings suggesting fungal or decomposed textures. Ears project laterally as rounded protrusions, while central facial zone is partially obscured by uneven fissures and ruptures in the bread-like surface. Subcranial area transitions into stacked configurations of fibrous, sponge-like, and decayed tissue textures, merging into tangled organic mass at the base. Limb-like appendages are absent, with overall body form resembling vertical accumulation of deteriorated food matter interspersed with skeletal suggestions.

Handwritten inscriptions in upper right quadrant include text "The Mill #1 Character Sketch by Joshua J. Stewart," identifying both project association and author of the concept art. Lettering is executed in mixed cursive and block styles with varied line weight. Paper exhibits faint creases and incidental marks, indicating manual handling and iterative drafting process. Graphite stroke application varies between bold outlines and lighter hatching, producing textural contrast across decomposed surfaces. The sketch emphasizes grotesque qualities through irregular contour, asymmetrical fissures, and clustered detailing of fragmented organic elements.

Image is displayed within mobile social media interface, visible through surrounding digital elements including application navigation bar, user profile header, comment metadata, and notification icons. Caption associated with post contextualizes drawing as preliminary design exploration leading toward painted realization exhibited at Montreal Comic-Con. The digital frame thus integrates analog drawing artifact with social platform environment, situating concept study within broader trajectory of production, exhibition, and distribution.
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.
Vertical composition presenting two anthropomorphic circular-headed figures aligned along a central axis, superimposed against a background of illuminated high-rise structures rendered in gradients of yellow, gold, and black. The upper figure displays a circular head form with simplified facial notation consisting of minimalistic marks: two small vertical strokes for eyes positioned symmetrically near the upper quadrant and a short downward arc suggesting a frown in the lower section. Its lateral boundaries extend into curved projections resembling stylized ears or symmetrical protrusions. This form maintains a uniform bronze-brown tonal field with subtle shading along edges to suggest curvature and three-dimensional volume.

Directly below, the second figure exhibits a similar configuration though paler in coloration, approximating beige-white with smoother tonal gradations. Its facial notation mirrors the minimalistic approach, with paired vertical marks indicating eyes and a downward-curved arc representing a neutral or concerned expression. The stacked alignment generates a totem-like arrangement where upper and lower figures reinforce verticality through symmetrical repetition. Slight tonal differences between the two emphasize contrast while preserving continuity of form.

The background field introduces an array of architectural silhouettes: angular towers, rectangular skyscrapers, and illuminated windows. These are rendered in strong vertical emphasis, with elongated forms stretching toward the upper margins of the frame. Chromatic palette centers around deep blacks contrasted with intense gold highlights, creating strong chiaroscuro and a sense of artificial illumination, consistent with urban nightscapes. Some structures present rectilinear geometries, others taper to triangular spires, while scattered window arrays punctuate the facades with linear repetition.

Spatial organization situates the figures at the forefront, occupying central dominance, while the urban architecture recedes into background layers. Foreground figures appear silhouetted against the glowing structures, creating contrast between matte, simplified forms and luminous, detailed backdrop. Directional lighting accentuates architectural edges, producing gradients that shift from bright gold at illuminated planes to near black within shadowed recesses.

Surface treatment of anthropomorphic figures avoids textural complexity, instead emphasizing smooth, unbroken tonal transitions across rounded surfaces. By contrast, architectural surfaces integrate rigid edges, parallel lines, and grid-like windows, generating a duality between organic stylization and geometric construct. The central axis alignment reinforces compositional stability, while background skyscrapers introduce dynamic tension through vertical thrust and angular orientation.

Overall structural system integrates figurative reduction with monumental architecture, creating a juxtaposition of humanized symbolic forms in confrontation with industrial urban density.
Installation view within a controlled gallery environment consisting of large-scale canvas mounted centrally on a white perforated wall with minimal architectural ornamentation. The canvas presents a painted composition dominated by overlapping bread-like forms rendered in brown, golden, and cream tonal gradients, simulating crust and crumb surfaces through blended pigment layering. Central portion of painting emphasizes a large loaf cross-section with incision resembling an abstracted cleft or folded recess, surrounded by semi-circular arcs suggesting stacked baked goods. Painterly technique employs tonal layering, subtle shading, and edge delineation to reproduce visual qualities of baked surfaces.

Canvas occupies upper register of field, suspended securely with visible wall mounting grid behind. Lower register of installation introduces accumulation of scattered bread fragments directly on gallery floor. These fragments are irregular in size, ranging from small crumbs to larger torn sections, dispersed loosely into a mound-like formation. Fragments positioned directly beneath canvas create vertical alignment between depicted bread imagery above and physical bread matter below, reinforcing thematic continuity between representation and material reality.

Surrounding environment is characterized by uniform white wall paneling punctuated with evenly distributed perforations, contributing to industrial modular aesthetic. Floor plane consists of polished reflective surface, amplifying visibility of crumb pile through subtle reflection. Lighting originates from overhead diffuse sources, generating consistent illumination across canvas and floor, minimizing cast shadows and emphasizing flat neutrality of gallery presentation.

Spatial hierarchy establishes tripartite system: painted representation of bread at upper field, real bread matter positioned below, and neutral gallery infrastructure framing both. Contrast between permanent canvas medium and ephemeral crumb matter underscores duality of fixed artistic object and temporary organic residue. Conceptual framework integrates painting, sculptural debris, and exhibition architecture into one unified installation, merging imagery, material, and environment.
 
  Getting more posts...