Mundane Anatomy

For the Creative for Emerging Realities course, led by Sanj Surati at the Miami Ad School in Berlin, I created a website based on a narrative driven by our personal interests. We then developed innovative practices on top of it, seamlessly integrating them into the site's narrative context.

The Narrative.

With a career rooted in visual arts, my passion for drawing taught me we often suffer from a "lazy eye”, seeing without truly observing.
That realization is the foundation of Mundane Anatomy.

Every day, we pass by ordinary objects on autopilot. Just as human anatomy reveals what lies beneath the skin, this project looks beyond the everyday to expose the hidden architecture of the forms around us, isolating overlooked objects from master photography and rebuilding them as interactive 3D models.

Mundane Anatomy is not just a statement.
It's a deliberate attempt to reignite our curiosity for our surroundings, allowing us to finally appreciate their inherent, dignified beauty.

William Eggleston, Memphis, c. 1969

Drawing inspiration from the photography of the great masters, I focused on specific objects or details within those scenes, bringing them to life as 3D models, as seen below.

Clicking the green dot triggers a tooltip that highlights the object.
A second click opens an interactive 3D viewer, where you can pan around the object and zoom in on specific details to fully explore its shapes and volumes.

I selected the photographers featured here because they capture reality with a genuine, unpretentious eye.
They don’t stage illusions. Instead, their perspective reveals the striking beauty of the everyday.

The Masters.