Using my uploaded reference photo: keep the same person with 100% identical facial features, face shape, bone structure, skin tone values, hairline, hair texture and hairstyle as in the original image. Do not change the identity or gender. The face in the final artwork must clearly be the same person from my photo, not a new or generic character.
Preserve my original eye shape, nose, mouth, jawline, ears and eyebrows exactly as in the reference, only changing the rendering style to a graphite drawing, without altering proportions or expression. Maintain the same haircut, hair volume and hair direction from the uploaded photo, but rendered entirely with pencil strokes.
Create a modern abstract digital painting composition, but make the face itself look as if it were hand‑drawn with graphite pencils of various thicknesses. Use a full range of pencil marks: ultra‑fine lines for pores, eyelashes and hair strands; medium strokes for shading and contours; and thick, soft graphite for deep shadows and bold accents on cheekbones, jaw and eye sockets.
Show clear graphite texture, hatching and cross‑hatching, smudged areas and soft gradients, as in a realistic pencil portrait on paper. Keep dramatic lighting on the face, with strong contrast between highlights and graphite shadows, so the drawing feels three‑dimensional and lifelike.
Around the face, keep the colorful geometric blocks, expressive brushstrokes and thin lines in orange, red, navy and gray from the abstract style, letting them overlap and interact with the graphite portrait. Use a crisp white background so both the pencil drawing and the abstract shapes stand out clearly.
The overall look should feel like a gallery‑quality mixed‑media piece: a hyper‑real graphite portrait of my face integrated into a modern abstract digital composition. Always keep the original face and hair identity from my uploaded photo with maximum fidelity, only changing the medium of the face to graphite of various thicknesses, never changing who the person is.