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 composite image is divided into two sections, connecting the symbolic imagery of Walking Bread with its public presentation in Montreal.
Composite image showing juxtaposition of digital publication screenshot and physical studio installation. Left section contains webpage open to an article titled “Making Bread With Alex Boya: How The Canadian Artist Is Worldbuilding In Reverse With ‘The Mill.’” Page layout displays large bread-figure illustration at top, followed by headline in bold typography and body text in column format beneath. Website header includes navigation bar and red accent design elements.