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Process

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Generation data

COPY ALL

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Prompt

External Generator
b1kt34rs, A single white marble bust statue stands centered on a polished black pedestal, its form rendered with photorealistic precision—every facet of the marble’s surface, from the subtle micro-reflectance to the faint, natural veining beneath the skin of the stone, captured in high fidelity. The bust is of a human face, serene yet sorrowful, eyes closed as if in silent grief, lips parted slightly, the contours of the nose and cheekbones defined by the cold, hard light that strikes from the upper left, casting deep, razor-edged shadows along the right side of the face and neck, while the left cheek glows with a soft, almost ethereal luminescence—like a spotlight trapped in marble. From the eyes, nostrils, and mouth, streams of liquid black tears drip in slow, viscous motion, each tear rendered with hyperrealistic physics: the surface tension clinging to the edges, the way light refracts off the wetness as it falls, the slight distortion of the marble’s surface as the liquid touches it, leaving behind faint, ghostly trails of moisture that evaporate into the air. The tears do not fall in a uniform pattern—they are irregular, chaotic, yet controlled, each one a separate, individual droplet, some larger than others, some caught mid-air, others already hitting the floor, pooling into a small, dark, reflective puddle beneath the statue’s chin. The floor is a seamless, cool-toned marble, polished to a mirror finish, reflecting the statue’s form and the single, intense spot of light that falls upon it from above—this spot is a perfect, circular, blindingly bright disc of white light, positioned directly above the statue’s forehead, as if a spotlight from heaven has been placed there to illuminate the sorrow. The light is not diffuse—it is sharp, focused, and almost surgical in its precision, casting a halo of soft, warm glow around the statue’s head, while the rest of the room remains in deep, cool shadow. The light does not illuminate the tears—it illuminates the statue’s face, the tears themselves, and the floor, making them appear as if they are part of the same luminous field, a single, unified moment of emotional intensity. The pedestal is simple, unadorned, its surface smooth and cold, reflecting the statue’s form and the light above it, but not the surrounding environment. The wall behind the statue is a blank, featureless expanse of white, with no texture, no imperfections, no shadows—just a perfect, sterile canvas that emphasizes the statue’s isolation and the emotional weight of its presence. The lighting is not ambient—it is theatrical, almost like a stage set, with the single spotlight creating a dramatic contrast between the illuminated statue and the dark, empty space around it. The air is still, the only movement is the slow, inevitable drip of the tears, the subtle shimmer of the light on the floor, and the faint, almost imperceptible vibration of the marble as it absorbs the weight of the liquid. The image is not static—it is alive, breathing, with the tears falling, the light shifting, the marble reacting to the moisture, the air holding its breath. The entire scene is rendered in hyperrealistic detail, with every surface, every shadow, every reflection, every droplet, every imperfection, every texture, every light interaction, captured with the precision of a scientific photograph and the emotional depth of a painting. The statue is not just a sculpture—it is a living, breathing, weeping entity, its sorrow rendered in the language of light, shadow, and water, its grief made visible, its pain made tangible, its beauty made tragic. The image is not just a depiction—it is a moment, frozen in time

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